ISSUE 8
19 July 2002 – 2 August 2002
Compiled by
Richard Sherman
Edited by
Kimo Goree
Published by the
International Institute for
Sustainable Development (IISD)
Distributed exclusively to the
2002SUMMIT-L
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GENERAL NEWS
-
PRESCOTT'S
ROLE AT EARTH SUMMIT IN DOUBT (Daily Telegraph 2 August 2002)
-
AUSTRALIA
RECOGNISED AS ENVIRONMENTALLY BACKWARDS: EXPERT (AsiaPulse 2 August 2002)
-
WSSD STILL
NEEDS MONEY (SABC News 1 August 2002)
-
87% OF
POLLEES WORRIED ABOUT ENVIRONMENT (Yomiuri Shimbun 1 August 2002)
-
NEW UN
PUBLICATION UNDERLINES VITAL ROLE OF ECOSYSTEMS IN REDUCING POVERTY
(United Nations 1 August 2002)
-
PARTNERSHIP
APPEAL BY YOUTH REPORTERS AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (EarthVision
Environmental News 1 August 2002)
-
GLOBAL WAR
ON GLOBAL WARMING HEATS UP (World Watch Institute 1 August 2002)
-
NGO Funding
Problems Likely to Be Eradicated (Business Day 31 July 2002)
-
YOUTH WIN
POLLUTION BET WITH BUSH, BARELY (Reuters Health via Yahoo 31 July 2002)
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: GM GOES GREEN: WORLD'S LARGEST CAR MANUFACTURER
SHOWCASES ECOFRIENDLY CARS, LOOKS TO PUSH NEW IDEAS AT WORLD GATHERING
(The Earth Times 31 July 2002)
-
MARINE
MAMMALS UNITE IN BEACHING AGAINST BUSH (Greenpeace International 31 July
2002)
-
AFRICA'S BEACHES ARE SLIP SLIDING AWAY (Independent Online 31 July 2002)
-
ACP-EU
FORUM ON RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PROGRESS REPORT (South
African Ministry of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology 30 July 2002)
-
UN'S
'RISKY' EARTH SUMMIT GAMBIT (BBC 30 July 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT ATTRACTS 106 LEADERS, NOT USA (Environment News Service 30 July
2002)
-
S.AFRICA
TRIES NOT TO TAKE HARSH STANCE AT WSSD: S.AFRICAN OFFICIAL (Xinhua News
Agency 30 July 2002)
-
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: HOW TO SMOOTHEN THE ROAD TOWARD THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (The Earth Times 30 July 2002)
-
WHERE HAVE
ALL THE BEACHES GONE? (UNESCO 29 July 2002)
-
PEACE:
MANIFESTO TO BE PRESENTED AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT (European Commission 29
July 2002)
-
FRENCH
PRESIDENT CALLS FOR EFFORTS TO MAKE EARTH SUMMIT SUCCESSFUL (Xinhua News
Agency 29 July 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TO START FROM AUGUST 26 (IRNA 29 July
2002)
-
S.AFRICA
SUMMIT RISKS WORSENING NORTH-SOUTH RIFT (Miami Herald 29 July 2002)
-
STOP THE
RECYCLED PEANUTS (The Guardian 29 July 2002)
-
FOCUS ON
SANITATION SABC (News 29 July 2002)
-
DROUGHT IN
AFRICA 'COULD BECOME A CATASTROPHE' (Daily Telegraph 29 July 2002)
-
POLITICAL
CLIMATE COOLS FOR FIGHT ON GLOBAL WARMING (Reuters 29 July 2002)
-
ZUMA CALLS
FOR TECHNOLOGY-DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP (BuaNews via All Africa 28 July
2002)
-
NGO'S URGED
TO PARTICIPATE AT U.N SUMMIT (e-Taiwan News 27 July 2002)
-
MINISTER
ADVISES GOVT OVER PROTECTION OF EARTH RESOURCES (Vanguard (Lagos) via All
Africa 27 July 2002)
-
LOCAL USAID
BOSS SAYS AGENCY COMMITTED TO ENVIRONMENTAL PROJECTS (Jamaica Observer 27
July 2002)
-
REPORT
LAUDS ENVIRONMENTAL EFFORTS OF FIVE CORPORATIONS (Taipei Times 27 July
2002)
-
ENVIRONMENTAL LAWYERS TO MEET IN CITY (Natal Witness 27 July 2002)
-
UNION
LEADER LOOKS FORWARD TO WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Canada
NewsWire 26 July 2002)
-
EU SETS OUT
AGENDA FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Europa World 26
July 2002)
-
U.S. WILL
"WORK TIRELESSLY TO ENSURE" SUCCESSFUL SUMMIT (Washington File 26 July
2002)
-
UN OFFICIAL
URGES BUSH TO ATTEND THE WORLD SUMMIT (SABC News 26 July 2002)
-
BLAIR AND
70 OFFICIALS TO ATTEND EARTH SUMMIT (Daily Telegraph 26 July 2002)
-
SUMMIT
TEXTS WILL BE READY, OFFICIALS SAY (UN Wire 26 July 2002)
-
CALL FOR ACCESS TO ECO NEWS (Gulf News 26 July 2002)
-
WEDEN
DONATES R10 MILLION TOWARDS WSSD (SABC News 25 July 2002)
-
NOT ENOUGH
PUBLICITY ABOUT JO'BURG WORLD SUMMIT (SABC News 25 July 2002)
-
UNDP BACKS
CALLS FOR REFORM OF GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS (SABC News 25 July 2002)
-
ENVIRONMENT
DOCUMENT PUBLISHED AHEAD OF SUMMIT (RTE Interactive 25 July 2002)
-
CIVIL
SOCIETY GEARS UP FOR WORLD SUMMIT (Mail & Guardian 25 July 2002)
-
OPTIMISTIC
MOOD AT INFORMAL WSSD PREP MEETING, BUT LITTLE PROGRESS ON SUBSTANCE
(Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest Volume 6 Number 28 24 July 2002)
-
PM PLANS TO
ATTEND S. AFRICA SUMMIT (Globe & Mail 24 July 2002)
-
BUSH TO
SKIP EARTH SUMMIT (Yomiuri Shimbun 24 July 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: COMMISSION PUSHES FOR TANGIBLE RESULTS
AND GLOBALISATION FOR THE BENEFIT OF ALL (European Commission 24 July
2002)
-
INFORMAL
MINISTERIAL MEETING (ENVIRONMENT): THE ENVIRONMENT IS TO HAVE A KEY
POSITION AT THE WORLD SUMMIT (Danish Presidency of the EU 23 July 2002)
-
THE EQUATOR
INITIATIVE ANNOUNCES 27 FINALISTS FOR CASH PRIZES WORTH $180,000 (United
Nations Development Programme 23 July 2002)
-
YOUNG
DELEGATES MEET FOR "MINI" EARTH SUMMIT (African Eye News Service 23 July
2002)
-
LOOKING
AHEAD TO JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: IICA, ALONG WITH WORLD LEADERS, CALLS FOR
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE (Inter-American Institute for
Cooperation on Agriculture 23 July 2002)
-
TANZANIA TO
EMPHASIZE BIOTECHNOLOGY AT WSSD (Xinhua News Agency 23 July 2002)
-
NITIN DESAI
SAYS JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PREPARATIONS ARE DOING WELL (The Earth Times 23
July 2002)
-
APEC ENERGY
MINISTERS AGREE TO WORK ON LONG-TERM ENERGY PLAN (Associated Press 23 July
2002)
-
WILL KOFI
ANNAN ATTEND THE UN'S WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT? (The Earth
Times 22 July 2002)
-
PREPARATIONS FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PROGRESS BUT DOCUMENT ISSUES NOT
FULLY CLARIFIED (The Earth Times 22 July 2002)
-
ACP
COUNTRIES TO PRESENT A COMMON POSITION AT WSSD (The Post via All Africa 22
July 2002)
-
ON EVE OF
JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT, INTERNATIONAL COALITION OF EXPERTS CHALLENGES GLOBAL
LEADERS TO DELIVER ON THE AGRICULTURE AND BIODIVERSITY AGENDA -- AGAINST
BACKDROP OF THE THREAT OF FAMINE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA, PRACTICAL, REAL-WORLD
SOLUTIONS TO FOOD PRODUCTION AND BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION UNVEILED Future
Harvest 22 July 2002)
-
SIGNS OF
WORLD SUMMIT FAILING TO ACHIEVE A BREAKTHROUGH (Business Day 22 July 2002)
-
THE
MILLENNIUM PROJECT RELEASES 2002 STATE OF THE FUTURE REPORT (Ascribe News
22 July 2002)
-
WORLD
SUMMIT FAILURE COULD IMPERIL TRADE TALKS: EU (SABC News 20 July 2002)
-
AUSTRALIAN
MINISTERS TO ATTEND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT (AsiaPulse 19 July
2002)
-
GET TO
JO'BURG EARLY (AND BE READY TO DO SOME WORK) (Mail & Guardian 19 July
2002)
-
CARING FOR
NATURAL RESOURCES IS PRE-REQUISITES TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Government
of Botswana 18 July 2002)
-
GERMAN
MINISTER KEEPS HIS FAITH IN UPCOMING EARTH SUMMIT (DW – World 17 July
2002)
OPINIONS
-
WORLD
SUMMIT ALL TALK, NO ACTION by Chi Chun-chien (Taipei Times 2 August 2002)
-
FIXING THE
GLOBAL WATER CRISIS NEEDS MORE THAN TAPS AND TOILETS by Jamie Pittock (WWF
31 July 2002)
-
A PROGRAM
TO AVOID APPALLING DETERIORATION by James Gustave Speth (International
Herald Tribune 30 July 2002)
-
REFORM OF
EU AID PROGRAMME IS OVERDUE by Clare Short (The Guardian 29 July 2002)
-
BUSINESS
AND NGOS MUST SEIZE THE DAY (Business Day via All Africa 29 July 2002)
-
SLOUCHING
TOWARD JOHANNESBURG: U.S. IS A LONG WAY FROM SUSTAINABILITY by John C.
Dernbach (Foreign Policy in Focus 26 July 2002)
-
THE MARCH
TOWARD DESTRUCTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT by Claude Martin (International
Herald Tribune 24 July 2002)
-
THE MISSING
LINK IN JOHANNESBURG: SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURS (The Earth Times 21 July 2002)
-
PARTNERSHIPS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: HARNESSING ACTION FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY " by Mark Malloch Brown (The Earth Times 21 July 2002)
ON THE WEB
-
FEATURE -
URBAN JUNGLES TO TEST UN RESOLVE AT SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 1
August 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17106/story.htm
-
INTERVIEW -
ENVOY SAYS EARTH SUMMIT BACK FROM THE BRINK (Reuters via Planet Ark 31
July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17094/story.htm
-
WHITE HOUSE
UNDERMINING ENVIRONMENT SUMMIT – SENATOR (Reuters via Planet Ark 26 July
2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17036/story.htm
-
FEATURE -
IS A "SIXTH" EXTINCTION LOOMING? (Reuters via Planet Ark 23 July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16971/story.htm
-
EARTH
SUMMIT FAILURE COULD IMPERIL TRADE TALKS - EU (Reuters via Planet Ark 23
July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16970/story.htm
-
EU TO
STRIVE TO MAKE EARTH SUMMIT A SUCCESS (Reuters via Planet Ark 23 July
2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16973/story.htm
-
EU
ENVIRONMENT MINISTERS PREPARE FOR EARTH SUMMIT (Reuters via Planet Ark 22
July 2002)
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16951/story.htm
GENERAL NEWS
1. PRESCOTT'S ROLE AT EARTH SUMMIT IN DOUBT
Daily Telegraph
2 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;$sessionid$NHTI4ZAAAAAOBQFIQMFCFFWAVCBQYIV0?xml=/news/2002/08/02/nsumm
02.xml&sSheet=/news/2002/08/02/ixhome.html&_requestid=735
The attendance of John Prescott, the Deputy Prime Minister, at this month's
Earth Summit has been cast into doubt as Downing Street seeks to avoid
accusations of lavish spending at a meeting dedicated to helping the world's
poor. Mr Prescott may become a victim of Tony Blair's desire to streamline
the British delegation to the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg, a gathering of 106 world leaders and up to 60,000 other
delegates. The British delegation has already been pared down from more than
100 ministers and officials to around 70, and there is pressure for further
cuts. Under threat are the First Ministers of Wales, Scotland and Northern
Ireland who are currently scheduled to attend the event, each with a small
group of their own staff.
Questions are being asked about their exact role at the international
meeting. "There are only four chairs allocated for each country in the main
debating chamber in the convention centre, so where would they all sit?"
asked a summit insider. The 10-day summit officially begins on Aug 26, but
Mr Blair is likely to fly into Johannesburg only for the main heads of
government meeting on Sept 2 and an official banquet in the evening. The
other leaders of the G8 are also due to attend, with the exception of
President George W Bush. The assumption is that Colin Powell, the US
secretary of state, will attend, although this is still uncertain. Security
so close to the anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks is a prime
concern, and the South African authorities are providing well-trained
security personnel to discourage world leaders from bringing their own small
armies of bodyguards. Although Mr Blair's plans are yet to be finalised, it
is possible that he will not even spend the night in South Africa, leaving
the bulk of the work to Margaret Beckett, the Environment Secretary, as
leader of the British delegation. She will enjoy the hospitality of the
£250-a-night Michaelangelo Hotel along with Clare Short, the International
Development Secretary, and, possibly, Michael Meacher, environment minister.
Mr Prescott will also stay there - if Mr Blair decides that he should go.
Controversy over the numbers of ministers and officials projected to attend
an Earth Summit preparatory meeting in Bali earlier this year led to Mr
Prescott staying at home.
Nine rooms have been allocated to Britain at the Michaelangelo, within
walking distance of the summit's main facilities in Sandton, Johannesburg's
most affluent commercial, residential and shopping centre. It would not look
out of place in Hong Kong, Los Angeles or Paris and yet within walking
distance is Alexandra township where blacks live in squalor. Those members
of the British delegation who cannot be housed at the Michaelangelo will be
based at a £50-a-night hotel closer to the centre of Johannesburg.
Mr Blair, who will arrive in Johannesburg after visiting another country in
southern Africa, is keen not to be restricted to the summit convention
centre. He wants a photo opportunity at a genuine African development
project, possibly tied in with access to clean water for the world's poor.
Water is one of five themes he has identified as central to the success of
the summit, and a suitable case study out in the South African hinterland is
being lined up for a visit. Britain's delegation of 70 is nothing compared
with the 300-strong delegation from Germany and the 200 or so Japanese and
200-strong party supporting President Chirac of France.
A senior United Nations source said: "Kofi Annan, the secretary-general, has
made it clear to UN agencies that they should take small, tight delegations.
"We're taking the Earth Summit extremely seriously. If people have
receptions they are being told not to get out the caviar." There is still no
clear agreement on the wording of the summit's final political declaration
and programme of action. The Bali meeting failed to iron out the
differences, mainly between the developed and developing world, and much
paperwork relating to the most important and controversial issues has still
to be agreed. It is intended that Johannesburg will provide the essential
environmental balance to agreements on liberalising trade, focusing on the
world's poorest countries and on increasing development aid
2. AUSTRALIA RECOGNISED AS ENVIRONMENTALLY BACKWARDS:EXPERT
AsiaPulse
2 August 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020802510000227.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
CANBERRA, Aug 02, 2002 (AsiaPulse via COMTEX) -- Australia has lost
significant ground in terms of its environmental policy and is regarded as
backwards and recalcitrant in that area, according to a key negotiator for
the United States at the coming World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD). There was no country that had swung more sharply against
environmental improvements in the decade since the Rio earth summit than
Australia, Professor Daniel Esty said. Australia has been grouped with the
United States as an environmental spoiler with its refusal to ratify the
Kyoto Protocol designed to curb climate change. Prof Esty said Australia's
record since the Rio earth summit showed a lack of leadership. "There is no
country in the world that has swung more sharply in the last 10 years than
Australia," he told ABC radio. "The US was not a leader in `92, it was sort
of dragged along in some respects - it did well on some issues, less well on
others.
"But Australia
was right out front, in `92, on a whole set of issues. "And today I would
say Australia stands arm-in-arm with the US at the trailing end of efforts
to address these global-scale problems and to take the environment
seriously, more broadly." About 100 heads of state are expected to attend
the summit but Prime Minister John Howard and US President George W Bush
will not be there, instead sending high-level delegations to negotiate. The
protocol could be ratified with the US and Australia but Mr Howard has
rejected it as it stands, arguing it could cost jobs. The protocol would
enforce targets to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Prof Esty said the world
was at risk of missing out because of a lack of action. "There's still not
an agreed upon agenda and frankly there's been a terrible lack of
leadership, especially from the US but also from countries like Australia,"
he said. His comments came as a Washington-based researcher, Seth Dunn, of
the Worldwatch Institute, said it was time to leave voluntary commitments
behind and adopt binding protocol targets. "Momentum for bringing the Kyoto
Protocol into force has been building, following the ratifications by the
European Union and Japan earlier this summer," he said. "With ratification
by either Russia and Poland, or Russia and Canada, the conditions for
bringing the treaty into force would be satisfied. He said US, Australian
and Canadian emissions exploded by 15.7, 32.3, and 11.5 per cent,
respectively, between 1990 and 2001.
3. WSSD STILL NEEDS MONEY
SABC News
1 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,39836,00.html
A month to go and still not enough cash. With South Africa's
largest-ever-hosted summit less than four weeks away, millions of rands are
still needed to host the event, which is expected to attract tens of
thousands of delegates. Moss Mashishi, chief executive of the Johannesburg
World Summit Company (Jowsco), who has shied away from giving exact figures,
says about 70% of the budget for the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) has been covered. The summit's total budget is about R550 million, of
which the South African government will contribute R200 million. Mashishi
said three or four donation deals to the summit still needed to be signed
and sealed. He was speaking at a signing ceremony in Johannesburg to mark
the German government donating R8 million to help fund the logistical
preparations for the summit to be held from August 26 to September 4.
Other donations for logistics have come from countries including the
Netherlands, which contributed R25 million to the summit and from Finland,
which contributed about R10 million. Anna Margareta Peters, the German
ambassador to South Africa, who signed the agreement, told reporters
interest in the summit was great. She was sure that the high-powered German
delegation attending the event would do its utmost to help ensure the
summit's success. Earlier this year Germany donated R4,5 million to fund the
Ubuntu Village, the entertainment and central hub of the WSSD. It also
donated millions of rands to allow poorer civil society organisations to
attend the Non-Governmental Organisations' (NGO) Forum, which will be
running parallel with the summit. Peters said it was critical the logistics
were well funded because it was an important aspect in ensuring the summit's
success.
Mashishi, who also signed the deal, thanked Germany for the money. "We are
honoured to receive this contribution. As South Africa we are really
acting... as the custodians of the summit on behalf of the world," he said.
"We welcome contributions from governments which are consistent with the
spirit of the world that the people are taking this event seriously."
Mashishi joked that he was "becoming associated with receiving money" but
Peters told him "receiving money for a good purpose is a good habit". On
preparations for the WSSD, Mashishi said plans were in the final stages and
momentum was building significantly. He also said there had been a "huge"
surge in bookings for the summit from all sectors. The event is expected to
attract between 40 000 and 60 000 delegates. - Sapa
4. 87% OF POLLEES WORRIED ABOUT ENVIRONMENT
Yomiuri Shimbun
1 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020801wo31.htm
Eighty-seven percent of pollees expressed concern over the future of the
global environment, according to a Yomiuri Shimbun nationwide survey
conducted on July 20 and 21. The figure combined those who said they were
"very worried" about the threat of environmental destruction and those who
were "fairly worried." Asked what they believed was the most pressing
environmental problem, the majority, or 57 percent, of the respondents said
global warming, followed by those who cited problems caused by chemical
contamination, such as destruction of the ozone layer and environmental
damage caused by the spread of dioxins, at 53 percent each. Seventy percent
of the respondents knew about the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on curbing greenhouse
gases, which requires industrialized countries to cut greenhouse gas
emissions, while 46 percent expressed interest in the World Summit on
Sustainable Development scheduled to start late August in Johannesburg.
Asked what they did to reduce carbon dioxide emissions on a daily basis, 47
percent said they refrained from overusing air conditioners, while 33
percent said they turned off the main power switch of electrical appliances
when not using the appliances. Twenty-eight percent said they purchased
energy-efficient electrical appliances. Eighty percent of the respondents
said they had reviewed their lifestyle in an effort to protect the
environment.
5. NEW UN PUBLICATION UNDERLINES VITAL ROLE OF ECOSYSTEMS IN REDUCING
POVERTY
United Nations
1 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=4346&Cr=biodiversity&Cr1=
1 August –
At current
extinction rates of plants and animals, the Earth is losing one major drug
every two years, while less than 1 per cent of the world's 250,000 tropical
plants has been screened for potential pharmaceutical applications,
according to a new United Nations publication released today. The first
"World Atlas of Biodiversity: Earth's Living Resources for the 21st Century"
by the UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC)
is a comprehensive map-based view of global biodiversity and shows how
humankind is dependent on healthy ecosystems for all its needs. The Atlas
provides facts and figures on the importance of forests, wetlands, marine
and coastal environments and other key ecosystems. It is the best current
synthesis of the latest research and analysis by UNEP-WCMC and the
conservation community worldwide - providing a comprehensive and accessible
view of key global issues in biodiversity. The publication also highlights
humankind's impact on the natural world: During the past 150 years, humans
have directly impacted and altered close to 47 per cent of the global land
area.
Under one bleak scenario, biodiversity will be threatened on almost 72 per
cent of the land area by 2032. The Atlas reveals losses of biodiversity are
likely to be particularly severe in Southeast Asia, the Congo basin and
parts of the Amazon. As much as 48 per cent of these areas will become
converted to agricultural land, plantations and urban areas, compared with
22 per cent today, suggesting wide depletions of biodiversity. UNEP
Executive Director Klaus Toepfer said wise use of the Earth's natural
resources was at the heart of sustainable development and a key issue for
world leader's attending the crucial World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), which opens in Johannesburg, South Africa, on 26 August. "Humankind
now diverts about 40 per cent of the Earth's productivity to its own ends,
much of this is being carried out in a destructive and unsustainable way,"
he said. "It is vital that we reverse these unsustainable practices while at
the same time taking advantage of the opportunities presented by the
planet's natural capital, its natural wealth."
6. PARTNERSHIP APPEAL BY YOUTH REPORTERS AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
EarthVision Environmental News
1 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthvision.net/ColdFusion/News_Page1.cfm?NewsID=21600
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, August 1, 2002 - The Global Youth Reporters, an
international group of young people with fresh views on environmental
problems, are seeking media and other partners to work with at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg, which runs from
August 26-September 4. The group aims to provide a young people's view of
what the world leaders at the Summit are doing about the environment, ten
years after their last big meeting in Rio de Janeiro. Toward this end, they
are looking for partners to help communicate the resulting reports around
the world. The idea is to offer fresh angles, particularly for media without
their own reporters at the Summit. The Johannesburg reporting operation will
consist of eight young reporters, ages 18 to 26, from eight countries:
Argentina, Australia, Czech Republic, Singapore, South Africa, Uganda, UK
and USA. The reporters will write reports on issues that catch their
attention at the Summit, with special emphasis on youth angles. The articles
will be published on a new website (http://www.gyrp.net
- under construction), distributed to conference delegates, and offered for
publication to national and international media. The Global Youth Reporters
Program, now entering its third year, was established to provide a high
standard of reporting, by young people for young people, on environmental
and sustainable development issues. The concept was first tested at the
Congress of IUCN - The World Conservation Union in Amman, Jordan, in 2000
and has since been developed through professional training courses and
reporting operations at other international conferences. The GYRP has the
endorsement of the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP). Other partners
offering various forms of support and cooperation include the Global
Responsibility Foundation (Switzerland), the Global Youth Network (South
Africa), the International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
(Sweden), Newsweek International and Sony International - Europe.
7. GLOBAL WAR ON GLOBAL WARMING HEATS UP
World Watch Institute
1 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.worldwatch.org/alerts/020801.html
Washington, DC - Thursday, August 1, 2002 The world is on the brink of
bringing into force one of the most far-reaching environmental treaties of
all time, the Kyoto Protocol. And even without the world's largest emitter
of greenhouse gases, the United States, on board, signatories of the
Protocol are setting the stage for a new generation of policymaking
worldwide, reports a new studythe first ten-year review of global climate
policy since the Rio Earth Summitby the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington,
D.C.-based research organization. "The next critical step in controlling
global warming is to bring the Protocol, and its legally-binding emissions
limits, into force as soon as possible and leave the era of voluntary
commitments behind," says Seth Dunn, author of Reading the Weathervane:
Climate Policy from Rio to Johannesburg. "The first President Bush argued
for soft, voluntary commitments in 1992. It was a questionable claim back
then, and one thatwith a decade of hindsightwe can discard. For the
current President Bush to continue recycling his father's failed policy
betrays either 'policy amnesia' or willful neglect of the record of the past
decade."
Momentum for bringing the Kyoto Protocol into force has been building,
following the ratifications by the European Union and Japan earlier this
summer. With ratification by either Russia and Poland, or Russia and Canada,
the conditions for bringing the treaty into force would be satisfied.
Climate change will loom in the background at the upcoming World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in August/September and will be
front and center at the next round of negotiations, which will take place in
New Delhi from October 23 to November 1. In this review of global climate
change policy since the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Dunn reviews
global and national carbon emission trends between 1990 and 2001, and
details the climate policies developed over the past decade in 11 industrial
and developing nations and the European Union. Among the findings:
The European Union, the climate policy pioneer, saw emissions drop by 0.2
percent between 1990 and 2001. But E.U. emissions rose in 2000 and 2001,
auguring future rises if new and stronger policies are not adopted.
Emissions in Germany and the United Kingdom fell by 17.1 percent and 4.1
percent, respectively, due to the shutdown of inefficient industries and a
switch from coal to natural gas for electricity.
Japan saw emissions balloon by 10.8 percent between 1990 and 2001, though it
still boasts the world's best ratio of carbon emissions per unit of economic
output.
The United States, Australia, and Canada saw emissions explode by 15.7,
32.3, and 11.5 percent, respectively, between 1990 and 2001.
Russia, the most carbon-intensive country, experienced a 30.5 percent drop
in emissions between 1990 and 2001, largely due to its economic collapse
during the 1990s.
Climate change rose to the top of the global agenda at the 1992 Rio Earth
Summit, where the original U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change was
adopted. Under this agreement, industrial and former Eastern bloc nations
agreed to aim to voluntarily return their emissions to 1990 levels by the
year 2000. However, nearly all the countries fell short of their initial Rio
goals. Globally, carbon emissions grew by 10.2 percent between 1990 and
2001. Meanwhile, the scientific case for action continued to strengthen, due
to further observed evidence of climate change and a string of new highs in
global carbon dioxide concentrations and global average surface
temperatures.
"The records in global CO2 concentrations and global temperatures, and the
upward trends in global and most national emissions, indicate that the gap
between climate science and policy has widened, rather than narrowed, since
Rio," says Dunn, who identified several key shortcomings in the policy
responses to date:
Most of the climate policies that were adopted have been too weak, only
partially implemented, or discontinued.
Governments have failed to develop "diversified portfolios" of policies,
with many relying on one type of measuresuch as weak voluntary agreements.
While "good practices" were identified in areas such as tax policy and
energy efficiency standards, the existence of "perverse practices"including
subsidies for fossil fuel production and consumption (estimated globally at
$200 billion per year)has been a major impediment to climate policymaking,
particularly in the United States, Canada, and Australia.
The transport sector emerges as a major blind spot in climate policy since
Rio, receiving very little attention while becoming the fastest-growing
source of emissions. Transportation, especially road transport, is projected
to remain the fastest-growing source of emissions through 2020, with the
most explosive growth occurring in the developing world. But governments
have been loathe to touch the massive direct and indirect subsidies for road
building, suburban development, and car travel that have fueled the surge in
transport emissions. Dunn defuses several common myths in the climate policy
debate, such as the claim that Brazil, India, and China are "rogue
emitters." "We found these nations taking numerous steps to slow emissions
growth, primarily for economic reasons," says Dunn. "For example, the U.S.
government projects that China will surpass the United States as the world's
biggest carbon emitter by 2020. But recent trends suggest that the gap
between the two countries' emissions may instead widen, as Chinese emissions
rise less rapidly than projected, due to significant reductions in coal use
and widespread energy efficiency improvements." Dunn also challenges the
claim, often made by opponents of the Kyoto Protocol, that the costs of
implementing the treaty will outweigh the benefits. The Protocol would
require industrial and Former Eastern bloc nations to collectively reduce
their greenhouse gas emissions by 5.2 percent between 1990 and 2008-12. But
there is significant uncertainty about the economic consequences of meeting
this commitment, as conventional economic models have historically
overstated the costs and understated the benefits of environmental
policies. "Keep in mind that the economists who predict that the Protocol
will be too expensive are the same nay-sayers who predicted that no
agreement would be reached in Kyoto," Dunn points out. "The real-world
evidence to date, and new studies showing significant potential for low- or
no-cost emissions cuts, suggest that they will be proven wrong once again."
Worldwatch Paper 160 - Reading the Weathervane: Climate Policy from Rio to
Johannesburg please visit
http://secure.worldwatch.org/cgi-bin/wwinst/BWP160
8. NGO FUNDING PROBLEMS LIKELY TO BE ERADICATED
Business Day
31 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207310543.html
The introduction of a citizen-based initiative by Ashoka, which promotes
nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) and encourages them to find innovative
ways of self sustainability other than relying on government or donor
handouts, could be a way of resolving NGO funding problems. NGOs are
continuously faced with problems funding their activities which are aimed at
uplifting communities. Their contribution to the sustainable development of
the country is usually underestimated, says Anusanthee Pillay, Ashoka
southern Africa's regional director . Ashoka is an international nonprofit
organisation that promotes creative and innovative ways for the NGO sector
to become self sustaining. With the upcoming World Summit for Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg, the crucial role played by civil society
including NGOs, nonprofit organisations and community based organisations in
alleviating poverty and promoting education and training will have to be
acknowledged. During the summit a civil society conference will run
concurrently at the Expo Centre in Nasrec, south of Johannesburg. Many
international civil society organisations are expected to attend. The latest
statistics on the state of the NGO sector in SA, compiled by the Graduate
School of Public and Development Management at Wits University and
co-ordinated by the Centre for Civil Society Studies at Johns Hopkins
University, shows that the NGO sector is represented by 98920 NGOs across
all sectors of the economy. The sector contributes 1,2% to the country's
Gross Domestic Product. It employs 645317 fulltime staff, 10,2% of the
formal non agricultural workforce, which is 1% higher than the mining
industry. It also employs a higher number of workers than public servants in
national departments. Pillay says NGOs play an important role in the growth
and development of SA. She says while the private sector has many sources of
capital (including investment banks, debt-equity sales, credit unions, and
venture capital firms), NGOs have a limited capital market to sustain their
work. International aid agencies, governments, and foundations are typically
the only sources of capital, she says. Sean Jacobs of Idasa, an organisation
which promotes democracy, says in its newsletter, EpoliticsSA, that NGOs now
compete directly with private and commercial firms to secure government
contracts. "Sometimes NGOs do not have the technical know-how to compete
with the more experienced private firms or consultants," he says. Pillay
says SA's NGO sector, rich in funding during the antiapartheid days, has had
mixed fortunes since. After the elections in 1994, many agencies redirected
their funding to the government and to other countries still in turmoil and
conflict. "The SA government still maintains a high level of funding but
many NGOs are unable to access it via the National Development Agency in the
Department of Social Development."
Pillay says NGOs have to be able to sustain their projects and their
organisations. "They must do this while remaining accountable to their
constituencies," she says. Pillay says Ashoka develops social
entrepreneurship. Social entrepreneurs are people who originate innovative
and creative ideas of how an NGO can be self sustainable, without relying
heavily on government and donor funds. The only difference between social
entrepreneurs and business entrepreneurs is that the social entrepreneur
applies the ability on creativity and innovative thinking for social change,
while the creativity of the business entrepreneur is aimed at profit.
Non-Profit Partnership director Eugene Saldanha says with alternative means
of self sustainability, the funding problems of NGOs is at times
exaggerated. Saldanha says while funding is important for NGOs, the problems
do not end there.
"The lack of skilled, or insufficient, management capacity to oversee and
ensure the successful implementation of projects and delivery of services is
another contributing factor to the problems faced by NGOs," he says.
Saldanha says for sustainable development to occur in the country, the NGO
sector will need the support of both the private and public sectors and this
means providing NGOs with nonfinancial services to help them deliver their
services more effectively and timeously.
9. YOUTH WIN POLLUTION BET WITH BUSH, BARELY
Reuters Health via Yahoo
31 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=571&ncid=751&e=7&u=/nm/20020731/hl_nm/pollution_environment_dc_1
WASHINGTON (Reuters Health) - A group of college and high-school aged youth
announced Wednesday that they narrowly won a self-imposed bet with President
Bush ( news - web sites) on cutting carbon dioxide emissions. Members of
SustainUS, a group promoting sustainable development and environmental
issues, said that they had collected pledges from American youth to reduce
CO2 emissions by 21,800 lbs. through increased energy conservation. CO2 is a
leading greenhouse gas thought to contribute to global warming ( news - web
sites). About 2,300 youth will meet their pledges by cutting back on
driving, taking shorter showers, and cutting consumption of energy-intensive
meat products, said Dan Jones, member of the group who is also a senior at
Hunter College in Manhattan. The group made a public bet with Bush on April
1 that it could secure enough pledges to cut emissions by 20,000 lbs.
Reports early Wednesday indicated that the group had fallen several hundred
pounds short of their goal, but late-arriving pledges put them over their
goal at the last moment, officials said. The bet was an effort by SustainUS
to promote the World Summit on Sustainable Development scheduled to take
place in Johannesburg, South Africa later this month. Activists said that
their win required Bush to attend the summit along with five US youth
activists. President Bush, well known for his fondness of competition and
friendly wagers, has been widely criticized for rollbacks in environmental
standards, including a recent decision to relax some rules on industrial
pollutant emissions from US factories. One problem with the bet, though, is
that the president never agreed to it. Activists said they do not expect
Bush to attend the summit, and the White House announced no plans for the
president to travel to South Africa. Instead, Bush plans to leave
Washington this week to spend most of August on a working vacation. "He
plans to be at his ranch in Crawford, Texas," said Scott Paul, a junior at
Columbia University and a member of SustainUS's steering committee.
10. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: GM GOES GREEN: WORLD'S LARGEST CAR MANUFACTURER
SHOWCASES ECOFRIENDLY CARS, LOOKS TO PUSH NEW IDEAS AT WORLD GATHERING
The Earth Times
31 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/johannesburgsummitgmgoesjul31_02.htm
Imagine this: you're driving down from New York to Florida and never once do
you have to stop for gas. In fact, you don't need any gas at all. All such
hassles are taken care of because you are in a hydrogen fuel cell-powered
car. General Motors (GM) had just such a scenario in mind when designing
the AUTOnomy, a fuel cell vehicle with a striking resemblance to the
futuristic Batmobile of comic strip fame. The AUTOnomy was only one of
several new designs for advanced automotive technology showcased at their GM
Technology Tour today in Central Park. "The AUTOnomy is a concept vehicle
designed around fuel cells and biwired technology, or electrical
wiring,"said Neil Schilke, GM's General Director of Engineering . "Fuel cell
vehicles run purely on hydrogen, which means that further on down the road,
it can help reduce our reliance on foreign oil and decrease the level of
harmful emissions."
On Monday, GM unveiled a new research facility in Honeoye Falls, New York,
to expand its ability to develop fuel cell technology. The new Fuel Cell
Development Center--an 80,000 square-foot facility--will develop fuel cells
for commercial use, creating up to 100 new research and engineering jobs.
GM hopes to use this launch to promote a revolutionary change in automotive
technology and usage. Through hybrid cars, fuel cells, and reliance on
diesel fuels, GM looks to create a wave of environmental awareness among its
consumers. "This is going to revolutionize the way we look at cars and
trucks," said Dave Barthmuss, GM manager of Energy/Environment and
Sustainability Communications. "Imagine the leap we took from riding horse
and buggy to using cars. That's the type of radical shift in lifestyle and
mindset we envision with hybrids and fuel cells. Our concept cars make the
Jetsons look prehistoric." GM is also sending representatives to the
upcoming UN World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, set to
take place at the end of August. While at the summit, GM hopes to present
plans for alternative transportation within the framework of sustainable
development. "We want to go to Johannesburg to educate leaders about fuel
efficiency leading to global sustainable mobility," said Beth Lowery, GM
Vice President of Environment and Energy. "Working with groups like the
World Business Council for Sustainable Development [WBCSD], we want to
generate consumer incentives for using such vehicles, to quell any fears
regarding safety, cost or efficiency." The Geneva-based WBCSD is a coalition
of more than 160 international companies committed to furthering the goal of
sustainable development. Lowery--who will attend the Johannesburg
Summit--also realizes the challenges she and others at GM are up against
when pushing for such new automotive technology, one of them being the price
of the vehicles. "We aren't even touching the cost issue right now. For the
time being, people need to be convinced that they are going to have a safe
ride in our cars and that they are bettering the environment each time they
ride in them before they worry about money." Since the showcase primarily
exhibited prototype vehicles, one of the fuel-celled cars was quoted as
having a price tag of $1 million. Once on the market, the price would
naturally fall to meet consumer needs. A spokesperson from the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) present at Tuesday's showcase
expressed concern about the relative absence of infrastructural change in
some of the fuel-efficient cars. "Sure some of these cars may be able to run
on cleaner oil. But until car companies are willing to re-design their
models so that consumers are no longer influenced by the 'bigger is better'
mantra that has been splashed all over their ads for years, then America's
roads will continue to have accidents resulting from these large-vehicle
collisions." Responding to the challenges facing GM's new drive for
ecofriendly cars, Schilke said, "We all agree that the road ahead is long
and difficult. Obviously, GM can't solve everything. But one way we can help
is to remove cars from the environmental debate altogether. By introducing
new measures to reduce harmful emissions and improve fuel efficiency, we
will help create a healthier environment for automotive mobility, a
necessary function that we can't and don't want to do without."
GM is the world's largest manufacturer of cars and trucks with more than
355,000 employees worldwide. GM intends to be the first automaker to sell 1
million fuel cell vehicles and expects to begin seeing them on the road by
2010.
11. MARINE MAMMALS UNITE IN BEACHING AGAINST BUSH
Greenpeace International
31 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.greenpeace.org/news/details?news_id=20541
Marine mammals are fed up with Bush's inaction on climate change, and his
latest announcement that he will not attend the Earth Summit in Johannesburg
has prompted protest on both coasts. Whale and manatee populations on the US
east coast have beached themselves in protest as ocean temperatures rise and
Bush opts out of global treaties to stop climate change.
Off the coast of Cape Cod, 55 pilot whales have stranded themselves on a mud
flat and are suffering from sunburn and sunstroke. Some of them were in
shock, probably because when they are out of the water, their own weight can
crush internal organs. Twenty of the whales have already died and rescue
workers expected they would have euthanized another 28 Tuesday evening
because they were too exhausted to swim back to open sea. One rescue worker
overcome with emotion at the sight of the dying whales said it was
desperation that drove the whales to beach themselves. "When will Bush see
that he is responsible for destroying not just life ON Earth, but under the
seas as well?" said the heartbroken rescue worker. Six endangered manatees
beached themselves in Florida on Tuesday in an attempt to appeal to Florida
Governor Jeb Bush to talk some sense into his brother President Bush and
tell him to attend the Earth Summit meeting which will take place in less
than a month in South Africa. Jim Huffstodt, an officer with the Florida
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says the manatees are exhausted
from mating. "These poor girls, the only way they can escape the attention
of the males, who are very persistent, is to ground themselves or go up on
the beach." But several spectators swear they heard the manatees moaning "Baaaad
Bush" in unison.
These protests on the east coast follow a massive squid protest on the coast
of California last week. Hundreds of jumbo flying squid washed up along the
San Diego coast which are normally found in the eastern Pacific ocean. Some
believe the arrival of the squid is related to the El Nino climate
phenomenon which sends warm tropical waters farther north than usual.
Although it was climate that brought them to the shore of California, their
mission was sending a powerful message to the US government to adopt clean
renewable energy and stop the assault on the planet. A local fisherman who
ensnared one of the squid close to shore said "With its dying breath the
squid said: 'People think I'm just a dumb squid, but I'm smarter than George
Bush when it comes to climate change'." Yet Bush is not alone in the dirty
energy camp. Australia also announced that they would not ratify the Kyoto
Protocol on climate change and aquatic life in the Pacific have not taken
the news well. Southern Right whales have maintained a high-spirited
protest in Sydney harbour for the past two days. The three adult whales are
maintaining a vigil in sight of the Sydney opera house and are attempting to
restrict boat traffic in the harbour. They want the Australia government to
take a new route at the Earth Summit and support plans to bring clean, green
energy to developing nations - a solution to climate change that all mammals
can appreciate. Just last week there was another massive protest on a beach
near Albany, Australia where 58 false killer whales beached themselves in
protest to Prime Minister John Howard's statement in Parliament that it
would not be in Australia's interest to ratify the Kyoto Protocol. Although
the marine mammals have caught on to the protest tactics quickly, the squid
are leading the way. A giant squid, 18 metres long and weighing as much as
250 kilograms, washed up on a Tasmanian beach last week protesting Australia
hiding behind the US policy on energy and climate change. Reports are also
coming in from Canada, another Bush backing country at international
negotiations on climate and environment. Although a small group of
politicians in the Canadian parliament are pushing their leader to adopt the
Kyoto Protocol, the Prime Minister is stalling and slow to take up any
action to prevent climate change. The news is out and we have received some
reports of a pod of humpbacks heading straight for the Canadian coastline.
These bold and brave moves by the oceans great creatures is a last warning
to take up action at the Earth Summit that will stop climate change and
provide the world with clean, renewable energy. They seem to care more about
the fate of the planet than our own governments. Support their heroic action
and keep an eye out for beaching protests in your country.
12. AFRICA'S BEACHES ARE SLIP SLIDING AWAY
Independent Online
31 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.itechnology.co.za/index.php?click_id=68&art_id=qw1028135520203B263&set_id=1
Eleven alarming national reports on coastal erosion in Africa will be tabled
for discussion at the World Summit on Sustainable Development which starts
in Johannesburg on August 26, the United Nations Department of Public
Information announced in a statement on Wednesday. "The pressure to attract
investment for coastal tourist facilities that bring much-needed new jobs
and revenue to developing countries, often ends up with projects that do not
meet minimum standards of coastal protection," said Patricio Bernal,
executive secretary of Unesco's Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission.
He said this was frustrating, since scientific and technical knowledge to
prevent coastal erosion was readily available and good practices were
clearly defined. The national reports state that the seafront of Grand-Bassam
in Cote d'Ivoire is in danger of crumbling into the water, while the
Nigerian coastline is disappearing at a rate of 20 to 30 metres each year.
The Seychelles, which has 491km of coastline on its 455 square kilometres of
territory, reported tourism as a primary cause of coastal erosion - mainly
arising from attempts to cosmetically improve the beach and swimming areas,
while the provision of marine facilities such as marinas and piers also
played a role. Gambia reported that the beach fronts of most of the hotels
along their coastline have been washed away. The reports mark the end of the
fact-finding mission of a new United Nations project that aims to focus
attention on the problem and to foster dialogue on solutions. - Sapa
13. ACP-EU FORUM ON RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PROGRESS REPORT
South African Ministry of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology
30 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.za/search97cgi/s97_cgi?action=View&VdkVgwKey=%2E%2E%2Fdata%2Fspeech02%2F02073109461004%2Etxt&Doc
Offset=14&DocsFound=6351&Collection=speech02&Collection=speech01&SortField=TDEDate&SortOrder=desc&ViewTemplate=gov%2
Fdocview%2Ehts&SearchUrl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Egov%2Eza%2Fsearch97cgi%2Fs97%5Fcgi%3Faction%3DSearch%26Result
Template%3Dgov%252Fdefault%252Ehts%26Collection%3Dspeech02%26Collection%3Dspeech01%26SortField%3DTDEDate%26Sort
Order%3Ddesc%26ViewTemplate%3Dgov%252Fdocview%252Ehts%26ResultStart%3D1%26ResultCount%3D25&
The ACP-EU Forum on Research for Sustainable Development took place at Cape
Town on 29 and 30 July 2002. Senior officials from the ACP Group of States
and EU Member States attended the meeting, which adopted the Agenda at Annex
1. The South African Minister responsible for Arts, Culture, Science and
Technology, Dr Ben Ngubane, hosted the meeting. This meeting was preceded,
at the same venue, by two consecutive ACP preparatory meetings, the first at
technical level and the second involving ACP Ministers responsible for
science and technology. The outcome of these meetings is reflected in the
Cape Town Declaration on Research for Sustainable Development (ACP/84/047/02)
and also in the ACP's Cape Town Plan of Action (ACP/84/048/02 final, Annex
3). These events represent an important political follow-up of the ACP
Vision for Sustainable Development. At its opening session Dr Rob Adam,
Director-General of the South African Department of Arts, Culture, Science
and Technology, Dr P Lutero, Assistant Secretary-General of the ACP General
Secretariat and Dr Louis Bellemin, leader of the European Commission
delegation, addressed the meeting. Chairpersons and General Rapporteurs for
the four working groups were appointed (Annex 2). The ACP-EU Forum targeted
two main outcomes: first a more in-depth discussion on the content of the
thematic priorities identified in the Shared Vision; and secondly, advancing
the preparation of key policy documents such as the Shared Vision and the
Plan of Action and considering the contents of a draft future Ministerial
Declaration which would emanate from an ACP-EU Ministerial meeting scheduled
for December 2002. Such a Ministerial meeting was deemed critical to
mobilise in a synergistic and complementary way, national resources in both
ACP and EU Member States as well as bilateral and bi-regional instruments.
Discussions were held in plenary sessions as well as in four working groups,
covering the priorities identified in the Shared Vision and allowing for
ample discussion on both technical content and its implications for policy.
Draft documents were consequently amended for transmission to the capitals
in the two regions and to the European Commission. Summaries of the
discussions carried out at Working Group level are attached. These
discussions were subsequently considered in Plenary. The salient conclusions
from these deliberations were adopted as the Cape Town Consensus. Of
particular importance, in carrying forward the ACP-EU S&T dialogue are the
following recommendations:
* To ask the ACP-EU Informal Taskforce to accelerate preparations for the
Ministerial Meeting, scheduled for December 2002 in Brussels;
* To request the European Commission to make the necessary and timely
arrangements leading to the full use of funding instruments in the 6th
Framework Programme and in the 9th European Development Fund, in support of
the S&T Co-operation and Research Capacity building, respectively;
* To prepare a detailed road-map of the activities to be implemented in the
run-up to the Ministerial Meeting and beyond - this road map should be
incorporated in the Plan of Action; and
* To further refine, on the basis of the Cape Town Consensus, the draft
Shared Vision, Plan of Action and Ministerial Declaration for final approval
by the forthcoming ACP-EU Ministerial Meeting. A preparatory meeting of
senior officials should immediately precede this meeting.
14. UN'S 'RISKY' EARTH SUMMIT GAMBIT
BBC
30 July 2002
Internet:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2159552.stm
The United Nations' strategy for the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) is a risk, a senior UN official says.
It aims to secure consensus on uncontentious issues, and purely voluntary
agreements on more ambitious goals.
The approach could go a long way to make the summit's goals a reality. But
there are fears it may play into the hands of governments unwilling to make
real changes. The acknowledgement that the UN's strategy is fraught with
problems comes from Jan Pronk, the special envoy to the WSSD of the UN
secretary-general, Kofi Annan. Mr Pronk, a former Dutch environment
minister, briefing journalists in London, UK, said Johannesburg would need
to agree a plan of action, with an agreed timeframe on implementation. There
were three areas, constituting an action plan, needing agreement:
* Agenda 21, the sustainable development plan of action drawn up at the 1992
Rio Earth Summit
* the Millennium Goals, which Mr Pronk said effectively meant "halving world
poverty by 2015"
* financial commitments to implement the plan.
There will be two levels of commitment sought from governments: consensus
agreements, a sort of lowest common denominator approach, known as type one,
and voluntary type two commitments, much more ambitious but entirely
voluntary.
Results expected
Mr Pronk said: "Type two is for the many countries which are willing to go
further. "It will let them set up networks with other countries, with
business, and with non-governmental organisations. He told BBC News Online:
"The cynics can certainly say this is something that may let unenthusiastic
governments agree very little. "But the developing countries want agreement
on a text first, and then the topping-up through type two agreements.
"That's pragmatism, the only possible approach. This is a UN conference, and
countries have been told they'll have to negotiate an outcome. "It is a
risky strategy. But you have to take risks." Mr Pronk said he thought
preparations for Johannesburg had taken "a good turn" since the fractious
preparatory meeting in Bali in June. "All the signs are that the Bali
problems are not insurmountable," he said.
Attendance not optional
"I expect the WSSD will be a success, meaning it won't be a failure. But
whether it's simply a success or a big success depends on commitment to
guarantee the implementation of the action plan. "Many countries see
Johannesburg as an opportunity to address some of the underlying causes of
alienation, frustration and the inclination towards violence. Johannesburg
"should tackle roots of violence" George Bush should be told he can't afford
not to attend. It's not a question of the US doing something for others -
the interests of its people are at stake." The twin-track approach fills
some observers with dismay. The UK's Royal Society for the Protection of
Birds, a key environmental policy campaign body, is among them. It says it
is "concerned that type two agreements are principally a US cover for
business as usual, and for governments to produce a weak plan of action".
American support
Liana Stupples, of Friends of the Earth, told BBC News Online: "Type two
agreements are an unproven way of trying to run the world on a whim and a
guess. "They give the US a trump card, allowing it to continue to exercise
a veto." But Derek Osborn, chair of the UN Environment and Development UK
Committee, told BBC News Online: "Partnerships like this are a good idea,
and a complement to effective action. "That mustn't let governments off the
hook. But it's easy to cast all the blame on the US.
"They're not being purely negative, and we sometimes have a beam in our own
eye, anyway."
15. WORLD SUMMIT ATTRACTS 106 LEADERS, NOT USA
Environment News Service (ENS)
30 July 2002
Internet:
http://ens-news.com/ens/jul2002/2002-07-30-03.asp
NEW YORK, New York, July 30, 2002 (ENS) - Leaders of 106 countries have
officially indicated that they will attend the United Nations World Summit
on Sustainable Development set for Johannesburg, South Africa from August 26
to September 4, the UN announced today. Delegations from 174 countries will
participate in the environment and development summit, but not all will be
led by heads of government or heads of state. A head of state represents the
state but does not exercise political power, while a head of government is
the person in charge of the executive branch of government. Heads of
government or heads of state from Europe, Russia, China, Australia, New
Zealand, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Japan and South Korea are among those who
will be attending the summit, but to date the White House has not indicated
that President George W. Bush will go to South Africa.
The National Security Council (NSC) office within the White House told ENS
today that the President has not made an announcement indicating whether or
not he will attend the summit. Nor has the United States designated a
person to head the delegation, which the United Nations has listed at the
ministerial level on the Provisional List of Speakers for the general debate
which takes place during the last three days of the summit, September 2
through 4. An NSC spokesperson who preferred to remain anonymous said that
Secretary of State Colin Powell might possibly head the U.S. delegation, or
the head job could be handed to Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs
Paula Dobriansky, who has led U.S. delegations to climate and sustainable
development negotiations for the Bush administration in the past. The
United States, India, Switzerland, Greece, and Austria are the only
industrialized or large developing nations that are still listed at the
ministerial level. Any country can update its listing until it is called
upon to speak on the summit floor. Forty-five other nations are now listed
at the ministerial level including: Chad, Chile, Cuba, Egypt, Estonia,
Palestine, the Philippines, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Syria. Some 65,000
people are expected to travel to Johannesburg for the event including the
official delegates to the summit itself and a significant number of
additional people attending events associated with the Summit, such as the
civil society Global Forum and the Ubuntu village and exhibition.
There are expected to be three main outcomes from the summit, United Nations
organizers say.
* A political declaration, where heads of state and government commit to
taking the action needed to make sustainable development a reality
* A plan of implementation, negotiated by governments, which sets out in
more detail the action that needs to be taken in specific areas
* Commitments by governments and all other stakeholders to a broad range of
partnership activities that will implement sustainable development at the
national, regional and international level
The Johannesburg Metro Council is spending more than R65 million (US$6.5
million) to host the expected delegates. A large portion of the money is
being spent on infrastructure development. Council officials said most of
the work will be completed by July 31. The council estimates the summit will
generate about R1 billion (US$99 million) for the city and create about
14,000 jobs.
Some 200 metro buses will be made available to transport delegates to summit
venues and tourism destinations around the city and to the Sandton
Conference Center where the official summit will take place. Due to the
threat of protests during the summit, a number of businesses in Sandton are
planning to temporarily relocate to Midrand, the South African Press
Association (SAPA) reported last week. The companies are concerned that any
possible mayhem could disrupt their business operations.
"Radical activists have said that they would ignore police plans to crack
down on their protests during the global environmental summit," SAPA
reported. Landless people from communities across the Johannesburg area,
organized as The Landless People's Movement, say they are suffering forced
removals at the hands of Joburg City Councillors. "The government's brutal
strategy to forcibly remove poor and landless people from their homes is
aimed at hiding South African poverty from the world ahead of the upcoming
World Summit on Sustainable Development," they said in a July 4 statement.
16. S.AFRICA TRIES NOT TO TAKE HARSH STANCE AT WSSD: S.AFRICAN OFFICIAL
Xinhua News Agency
30 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020730820000081.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
JOHANNESBURG, Jul 30, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- South Africa would try to
avoid alienating any country by taking a too radical position at the World
Summit on Sustainable Development to be held here from Aug. 26 to Setp.4, a
senior official told the parliament on Tuesday. Trade and Industry chief
director for multilateral trade negotiations Xavier Carim said this when
addressing MPs from trade portfolio committee, the South African Press
Association reported. "If you take a very harsh stance you run the risk of
some countries not turning up," Carim said. There was an agreement that the
summit would not focus only on environmental issues, he explained, adding
that countries come to Johannesburg with different initiatives. The Group
77 of developing countries wanted the summit to put more energy on issues
like agricultural subsidies, market access
and debt relief; the European Union had been looking forward to greater
focus on environmental issues, while the United States, Canada and Japan had
argued against prejudging ongoing World Trade Organization talks. He added
South Africa would underscore the importance of the developmental agenda but
had to be very careful about the words used in the text for the summit.
"As the host, we have to look for a successful outcome," he said. "If we
want to move forward we have to very careful how we manage it (the
summit)." He said the government would use the summit to check the progress
in implementing Agenda 21, which was passed at the Rio de Janeiro summit ten
years ago, and try to set the specific targets and objectives in this
regard.
There appeared to be a lack of political commitment to these targets, which
had led to the worsening global environment, the increasing gap between the
poor and rich, and the higher levels of poverty. South Africa would work
for a forward-looking agenda, but wanted countries to renew their commitment
to the Agenda 21 principles rather than renegotiate that agreement.
This new agenda should include ways to help eradicate poverty and reduce
global inequality through, among other things, encouraging long-term
investment in developing countries, enhanced market access and debt relief,
Carim said.
17. JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: HOW TO SMOOTHEN THE ROAD TOWARD THE WORLD SUMMIT ON
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
The Earth Times
30 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/johannesburgsummithowjul30_02.htm
UITED NATIONS--Say this for the team that is preparing frenetically for the
Johannesburg Summit: They want to overcome the odds barring their way to
success. Summit Secretary General Nitin Desai is working long hours, even
more so than usual. A recent "Friends of the Chair" meeting (held on July
17) wound up after tough deliberations as "very constructive." In South
Africa, President Thabo Mbeki created the Johannesburg World Summit Company
(JOWSCO) to oversee operations for the international conference, at which
nearly 100,000 people are now expected. JOWSCO officials have injected a
spirit of efficiency and good cheer that their UN counterparts applaud. The
"Friends of the Chair" was also a Mbeki initiative. He organized a group of
25 countries based on geographical representation to convene prior to the
summit and help expediate the summit process in Johannesburg when the
conference is held from August 26 to September 4. Secretary General Desai
emphasized that this is not a negotiating group, "because negotiations
should involve all Member States." He said that the meeting was an
opportunity to discuss how to go about resolving the differences that
emerged at last month's preparatory meeting in Bali, Indonesia. That meeting
resulted in consensus on three-quarters of the summit's program. The program
areas and activities agreed upon include issues involving the main
themes--water, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. "The 25 percent
that remains unresolved is about matters of principles, finance,
globalization, trade, governance, technology and the setting of targets and
timetables," Desai said at a briefing on the upcoming summit. Desai said
that, "the 'Friends of the Chair' came to the New York meeting with an
optimistic outlook and left with a deeper understanding of one anothers
views and positions on the remaining issues and also their mutual
expectations." Desai added: "Everybody understands better how to find common
ground in Johannesburg where negotiations will take place." The countries
invited by President Mbeki--who will also be the formal Chairman of the
summit--to serve as "Friends of the Chair" include Argentina, Brazil,
Canada, China, Denmark, Egypt, France, Germany, Ghana, India, Indonesia,
Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Mexico, Nigeria, Norway, Russia, Senegal,
Sweden, Uganda, United Kingdom, United States and Venezuela. The
Johannesburg Summit will offer the opportuntity to confront serious and
growing threats to humanity. A third of the world's population of six
billion lives on an income of an equivalent of less than two dollars a day.
The use of fossil fuels is rising rapidly. Patterns of production and
consumption continue to eat up natural resources faster that they can be
replenished. Three-quarters of the world's fisheries are exploited to their
sustainable limits or beyond. Mountain glaciers are slowly melting away and
the world's forests have shrunk in the last decade by an area larger than
Venezuela. At the Johannesburg Summit, world leaders are expected to adopt
an implementation plan for sustainable development and to announce
partnership initiatives aimed at delivering results on the ground. "I expect
to see a wide range of initiatives launched by the corporate sector, NGOs
and local authorities," Desai said.
18. WHERE HAVE ALL THE BEACHES GONE?
UNESCO
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:CIP0syzkoq8C:www.johannesburgsummit.org/html/documents/backgrounddocs/unescoreport.pdf+
acops+africa+coasts+ioc&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
Paris, July 29 - When some of the 27 million international tourists
visiting Africa go to relax by the ocean this summer, they could find the
beach is no longer there. The coastline is receding at 1-2 metres per year
in parts of Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia and other African countries. The seafront
of Grand-Bassam, the colonial capital of Côte d'Ivoire, is in danger of
crumbling into the water. Meanwhile, sections of the Nigerian coastline are
disappearing at an astonishing 20-30m a year. Coastal degradation is a
problem world-wide, but 11 African countries (Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana,
Kenya, Mauritius, Mozambique, Nigeria, Senegal, Seychelles, South Africa and
Tanzania) have now teamed up to do something about it. Eleven hard-hitting
national reports just published as part of Africa's contribution to the
World Summit on Sustainable Development, that kicks off in Johannesburg on
August 26. The reports wind up the fact-finding phase of a project,
implemented by UNESCO and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP),
that germinated back in 1998 in Maputo (Mozambique), when environment
ministers from over 40 African countries met to address the problem of
coastal deterioration. Ministers from the 11 countries that took up the
challenge will now be using the Johannesburg meeting to attract extra
backers for a new phase of action-research, while inviting other African
states to come on board. The project has also just been taken under the
umbrella of NEPAD (New Partnership for Africa's Development), the initiative
put together by African leaders and endorsed by the G8 at their June meeting
in Canada. Africa's 63,124 km of coastline is crucial to the economies of
many of its states, especially through fishing and tourism. And some island
states, like Seychelles and Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, are almost
entirely dependent on their coastal resources for income. For a total area
of 455 square kilometres, the Seychelles has 491 km of coastline, with the
entire population effectively living on the coast. A boom in tourism has
brought rapid growth to the economy. The number of visitors swelled from
54,490 in 1971 to 130,046 in 2000, while GDP per capita rose from US$3,600
in 1975 to US$7,192 in 1998. The new prosperity, though, has put pressure on
the very coastal ecosystems that created it. The Seychelles is an
archipelago of 72 low-lying coral islands and 43 mountainous granite
islands. But 90% of its 80,410 population live on just one of these islands,
Mahe. With that island's rocky interior unsuitable for development, the
limited coastal zone attracts most of the construction, whether for homes,
hotels or new roads. And this often has negative effects on coastal ecology.
"Tourism," says the Seychelles report, "is a primary cause of coastal
erosion, mainly arising from attempts to cosmetically improve the beach and
swimming areas, as well as the provision of marine facilities such as
marinas and piers." And, while the government has passed a wide range of
laws to protect the environment, says the report, "enforcement is often a
major problem." The Gambia report tells a similar tale. "The beach fronts of
most of the hotels have been washed away," while some of those that are left
have invested over US$300,000 protection measures. Coastal erosion, says the
report is "one of the most devastating in protection measures. Coastal
erosion, says the report is "one of the most devastating in environmental
problems" facing the country. Some 45% of the population and 60% of jobs are
in the coastal zone, not to mention wildlife, including rare species such as
the green turtle which use the receding beaches as a nesting grounds.
Coastal erosion is part of a natural process. Sandy beaches are naturally
changing. When waves hit the beach at a certain angle, they drag the grains
from one spot and deposit them further along, causing the beach to "migrate"
sideways. Under normal conditions silt from rivers replenishes them. But any
construction on the seafront, such as piers, marinas, landfill and
buildings, interferes with this process. In Nigeria's Barrier Lagoon, moles
(walls of the artificial harbour) stop the silt from replenishing the
beaches. The lagoon's popular Victoria Island beach, for example, at the
entrance to Lagos harbour, is now eroding at a rate of 20-30m a year.
Meanwhile the silt is building up outside the harbour.
These man-made causes, compounded by upstream damming of the Niger River and
sand-mining, add to the vulnerability of the Lagos coast, which is already
battered by strong tides and waves. If sea-level does rise by 0.5m to 1m
with global warming by the end of the century, as predicted by the
International Panel on Climate Change, the barrier lagoon area of Lagos
State alone would lose 284-584 square kilometres of its coastline through
erosion and flooding. This could cause an estimated US$12 billion loss of
revenue from tourism, commerce and spending by residents in one district
alone. Some low-lying settlements are already flooded regularly when storms
coincide with high spring tides. Meanwhile, uncontrolled sprawl of Africa's
growing coastal mega-cities means that untreated sewage often ends up in the
sea. Lagos has no central sewage treatment facilities, so waste from septic
tanks is transported by truck to the coast and emptied directly into the
sea. Much the same happens in other African cities, according to the
reports. Yet property development, landfill and pollution are not the only
causes of coastal degradation. In many places coral reefs and mangrove
forest, which provide a natural protection to the coasts, are being damaged
or cleared. This exposes beaches to waves and wind. In the relatively
well-preserved Seychelles, the main threat to coral is bleaching, as a
result of increased sea temperature through global warming. Even a 1°C
increase in temperature can kill the tiny, pigmented organisms that live in
symbiosis with the coral-building polyps. And their death ultimately kills
the coral host that depends on them for nutrients synthesized by sunlight.
In the granite islands of the Seychelles, according to that country's
report, a 1997-98 survey showed that only 10% of live coral remained in some
areas.
In Tanzania, on the Indian Ocean, the coral is also threatened, but mostly
as a result of direct human activities. Coral reefs are home to hundreds of
fish species, which traditionally provide the main source of protein for
local villagers. A combination of pressures has pushed the villagers to fish
beyond their own subsistence needs - and to use destructive techniques, like
dynamiting and poison, to boost their catch. In one two-month period in
1996, says the Tanzanian report, 441 dynamite blasts were recorded in one
bay, while, "in the Songo Songo Archipelago, 30 blasts were heard every
three hours and, at Mpovi reef, 100 blasts were recorded during one six-hour
period." And, the report goes on, "besides breaking the reef structure into
rubble, each dynamite blast also kills all fish, plankton and most
invertebrates within a 15-20m radius." Uncontrolled bottom trawling by
foreign commercial fishing vessels also destroys the reef, effectively
scouring the seabed. And relatively poor countries like Tanzania do not have
the resources to police their offshore resources. The present project,
called the "African process for the development and protection of the marine
and coastal environment in sub-Saharan Africa", is part of a series of
actions on coastal management in African states that started in 1998 at the
Pan-African Conference on Sustainable Integrated Coastal Management (PACSICOM).
Essentially an African project implemented with support from UN agencies,
all the national reports were researched and written by African experts from
ministries, NGOs, and universities. Each fact-finding team comprised
expertise from three main disciplines - natural science, law, and
socio-economics - in an effort to represent the different stakeholders
involved in coastal management.
None of the reports envisages a quick fix to these coastal problems. And, as
Patricio Bernal, Executive Secretary of UNESCO's Intergovernmental
Oceanographic Commission (IOC), says, the project recognizes the complexity
of the issues. "The pressure to attract investment for coastal tourist
facilities, that bring much-needed new jobs and revenue to developing
countries, for example, often ends up with projects that do not meet minimum
standards of coastal protection. Dramatic cases can be seen all round the
world, where huge tourist complexes, built immediately adjacent to the
beaches, are surrounded after a few years by pebbles and rocks, as tourist
run away from waves crashing on their hotel doorstep. This is frustrating,
since the scientific and technical knowledge to prevent it are available and
good practices have been clearly defined."
The "African Process" project is an effort to apply this knowledge where it
is most needed. So far, the project has been partly sponsored by the UN
Development Programme's Global Environment Facility (GEF) and implemented by
UNESCO's Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, the UN Environment
Program (UNEP), the Advisory Committee on Protection of the Sea (ACOPS), and
UNEP's Global Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine
Environment from Land-Based Pollution (GPA). But other backers are expected
to provide funding at Johannesburg for a new phase that will be looking for
solutions.
The very structure of the "African Process" project looks for synergy
between coastal states, setting up continental and sub-regional responses to
shared problems. At present national responses vary from legislation - with
the inherent problems of enforcement - to public awareness campaigns,
eco-tourism, monitoring programmes, marine parks and public-private
partnerships to finance utilities, like sewage treatment. Tanzania, for
example, plans to assist fishermen to buy the gear and vessels required to
move from inshore fishing to offshore fishing and to close coral reefs on a
rotating basis. "And, like others, the Tanzanian report recognizes that,
while marine parks and conservation areas are helpful, sustainable economic
activities also need to be developed.
19. PEACE: MANIFESTO TO BE PRESENTED AT JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT
European Commission
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/development/news/news_en.htm#8
A group of politicians, scientists, artists and civil society leaders will
present a "Peace Manifesto" to the Earth Summit in Johannesburg (August 29 -
5 September 2002) urging world leaders to halt armed operations during
peacetime. The manifesto will be drawn up at the International Conference on
Peace and Development which will be held in Puerto Rico on 12 - 14 August
2002. The Conference is being supported by the Arias Foundation for Peace
and Human progress (formed by Nobel Prize laureate Oscar Arias), the Puerto
Rico Senate, the East Council and the Economists Allied for Arms Reduction.
A number of Nobel Peace Laureates will be attending the Conference. The
Conference Manifesto will call for a redoubling of efforts to reduce the gap
between the industrialised North and the developing South. Participants are
expected to issue a harsh condemnation of the "terrorism of indifference"
perpetuated by world powers. Mr Antonio Faz Alzamore, Puerto Rican Senate
President, said "Terrorism is not caused only by bombs, but by looking the
other way, and refusing to see that every day 40,000 children die of hunger
or diseases."
International Peace Decade
In 1998, the United Nations proclaimed 2000 as 'the Year for the Culture of
Peace' and the years 2001-2010 as the 'International Decade for a Culture of
Peace and Nonviolence for the Children of the World.' This followed an
appeal by all 23 living Nobel Peace Laureates in 1998.
20. FRENCH PRESIDENT CALLS FOR EFFORTS TO MAKE EARTH SUMMIT SUCCESSFUL
Xinhua News Agency
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020729350000063.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
PARIS, Jul 29, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- French President Jacques Chirac
on Monday urged all participants to the upcoming United Nations Earth Summit
in Johannesburg to overcome divergence and ensure a success of the world
summit on sustainable development. "Whatever the difficulties, we could
make the Johannesburg summit a success," said Chirac to representatives of
non- governmental organizations preparing for the summit scheduled from
August 28 to September 4 in the South African city.
The UN summit is to implement the recommendations adopted at last Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 to coordinate economic growth plans and
environmental protection. "It will be a good occasion for nations to
overcome their divergence and envision their common future," said the French
president. "It supposes that beyond our differences in opinions and
interests, we plead for the same cause of solidarity, of general interest of
the humanity, of universal ethic," said Chirac. However, efforts have not
been enough at achieving these goals, he said, giving as examples the
difficulties to implement the Kyoto protocol, the dying-out of
bio-diversity, the disastrous spreading of AIDS and the persistence of
poverty in the world. Chirac is to lead the French delegation to the Earth
Summit in Johannesburg, to which 60,000 people are expected to participate.
Chirac is one of several heads of state who have confirmed their
participation to the summit. On Monday, about 15 NGOs had a two-hour
meeting with the French presidency and ministries of environment and
cooperation to discuss the work at the summit. They mentioned the policy of
water, energy, the responsibilities of enterprises, food safety, agriculture
and solidarity with the South during the meeting, according to the French
presidency. Earlier in July, a two-day pre-summit conference was organized
in western French city of Rennes and attended by more than 500 French
politicians, business leaders and NGOs. "If the Johannesburg (summit) were
a failure, there would be a real despair. We have no right to fail," said
French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin at the start of conference.
"France will be mobilized to assure that the Johannesburg summit will be a
success," he said, adding that preparatory meetings of the summit have
witnessed "difficulties and sometimes tensions" in negotiations.
21. WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TO START FROM AUGUST 26
IRNA
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.irna.com/en/head/020729195954.ehe.shtml
Tehran, July 29, IRNA -- Faced with alarming deterioration in the earth's
vital life-supporting ecosystem, world leaders will gather
at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg, South Africa
from August 26 to September 4 to pursue new initiatives to implement
sustainable development and build a future of prosperity and security for
their citizens. UN Information Center (UNIC) in Tehran said that the
Johannesburg Summit offers an historic opportunity to confront serious and
growing threats to human well-being, a third of world's people live on an
income of less than two dollars a day, use of fossil fuel is rising rapidly,
patterns of production and consumption continue to eat up natural resources
faster than they can be replenished, three-quarters of world's fisheries are
fished to their sustainable limits or beyond, mountain glaciers are slowly
melting away and the world's forests have shrunk in the last decade by an
area larger than Venezuela. These trends can be reversed, but decisive
action is needed. While action is expensive, the cost of doing nothing is
even higher. For example, every land degradation and desertification cause
an estimated dlrs 42 billion in damage and lost income, but to prevent
degradation would total only dlrs 2.4 billion a year. No amount of money,
however, can restore lost bio-diversity or bring back plant and animal
species, once they are extinct. The international community will come
together in Johannesburg just as southern Africa is struggling to cope with
a drought that has parched the entire region, compounding problems of
poverty and HIV/AIDS and threatening famine. "It is urgent for the world as
a whole to learn the lessons of this drought," United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, "which gives us an ugly picture of the
fate that lies for us, and for our children, if we do not find models of
development that are genuinely
sustainable."
22. S.AFRICA SUMMIT RISKS WORSENING NORTH-SOUTH RIFT
Miami Herald
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.miami.com/mld/miami/news/politics/3756995.htm
OSLO - The "Earth Summit" meant to save the planet is in danger of
backfiring by deepening rifts between rich and poor countries. Governments
are scrambling to salvage next month's gathering, billed as the largest U.N.
meeting in history with more than 100 world leaders and 60,000 delegates,
even though President Bush plans to stay home. The World Summit on
Sustainable Development, to be held in Johannesburg from August 26-September
4, is far behind schedule in working out a blueprint to safeguard the
environment while promoting economic growth to meet a U.N. goal of halving
the number of people living on less than $1 a day by 2015. On a gargantuan
agenda, summit goals include finding ways to curb consumption of fossil
fuels, slow down deforestation, fight diseases from AIDS to malaria and
provide clean drinking water to a billion people who lack safe supplies.
Preparatory talks ended in deadlock in June, raising fears of a fiasco in
Johannesburg with the developing world accusing the United States and other
rich countries of setting worthy long-terms goals that never get turned into
action. "Failure would be a failure for the whole world," said John Hirsch
of the International Peace Academy in New York. "There is a mutual need for
success. The alternative is a widening gap between the developing world and
the developed world." Many governments want more streamlined and less
amorphous agendas for U.N. meetings -- the draft declaration for
Johannesburg is 77 pages long with scant mention of new timetables or cash.
FIGHTING OLD BATTLES
"What we seem to be doing at almost all U.N. conferences is to defend old
commitments rather than make headway on new challenges," said Norway's
Development Minister Hilde Frafjord Johnson. "We don't think it is extremely
beneficial to continue with these kinds of conferences. We have to make sure
that this is Rio plus 10 rather than Rio minus 10," she said. The
Johannesburg summit is meant to build on the Rio de Janeiro Earth Summit in
1992, the first environmental summit after the Cold War. Rio's agreements
included pledges to fight global warming in a deal since undermined by a
U.S. pullout. Many other promises at Rio have not been kept. And
Johannesburg faces criticisms that it is trying to solve too many of the
planet's problems in one go -- an almost inevitable recipe for failure. U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan says it will address five priority areas --
water, energy, agricultural productivity, biodiversity and health. It will
also seek to meet U.N. goals of cutting poverty by 2015 and will chart new
partnerships between governments, businesses and civic organizations as a
basis for development. About 1.2 billion people live on less than $1.0 a
day.
FAR OFF, FAR-FETCHED?
Roberto Bissio, director of the Third World Institute in Uruguay, said poor
countries were angered by the willingness of the rich to set development
targets for 2015 when they will be out of office and no longer accountable.
"If you agree to halve poverty by 2015 you should also set targets for 2005
and 2010," he said. "That would show that developed nations are taking this
seriously." Mats Karlsson, World Bank vice president for U.N. affairs, said
summits focused attention on environmental problems even if they failed to
live up to their ambitious billing. "If we make progress against poverty by
2050, for instance, we would have a world economy that's three to four times
the size of today. You cannot consume four times as much water. You don't
have the technology to consume four times the amount of energy. "If you need
77 pages to describe that problem then so be it," he said, referring to the
summit draft. "This is extremely complex. We're discussing the world's
future." All agree that summit planning is running dangerously late even
though a flurry of meetings since the last preparatory talks in Bali,
Indonesia, have eased some of the gloom.
"At least there's a will to negotiate. We have to avoid disaster," said Kim
Carstensen of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) after meetings including
in New York, Stockholm and Rio. Even so, a draft declaration had been agreed
about two months before a U.N. development summit in Mexico in March. And in
May 1992, negotiators agreed the plan to fight global warming a month before
the start of the Rio conference.
"SHELL OF PROTECTIONISM"
Failure or toothless accords at Johannesburg could aggravate North-South as
the main faultline in global politics after the end of the East-West divide
that was celebrated in Rio. "The North is entering its shell of
protectionism," said Indian Commerce Minister Murasoli Maran. "They want to
prevent the South from using the only competitive advantage they have:
abundant labour." Poor countries are told to protect rain forests or
endangered species with the lure of aid and freer trade. But many say that
an end to farm subsidies in rich nations, shutting out exports from cocoa to
apples, would be better. The United Nations estimates that rich nations pay
their own farmers about $1 billion a day in subsidies -- six times aid
payments to the developing world. Despite discord in Johannesburg, all agree
that summits will continue as the only way to focus leaders' minds. Since
trade talks in Seattle collapsed amid anti-globalisation violence in 1999,
international leaders are increasingly aware of the dangers of failure. "At
the food summit in Rome (in June) the accusation was 'they went to big
hotels, ate a lot and talked about hunger'," said Will Day, head of CARE
International UK. "But to get the right people in the room with a clear
purpose is always better than e-mail and phone calls."
23. STOP THE RECYCLED PEANUTS
The Guardian
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/famine/story/0,12128,764939,00.html
This was supposed to be Africa's year. There was talk of fresh starts, of
links that would be forged between Africa's new breed of dynamic leaders and
western cash, of markets that would be opened and stomachs that would be
filled. Instead, it is the same dismal story. In Johannesburg next month,
world leaders will gather for the summit on sustainable development, a
10-day talk fest that will only emphasise the gulf in thinking that divides
the first and third worlds. It will achieve nothing. Meanwhile, in a band of
countries to the north - Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Mozambique - more
than 14 million people are facing starvation in the continent's worst famine
in 10 years. So much for the idea that 2002 would see a new Marshall plan
for Africa. Even at the best of times, the notion that the west would
devote its energy to Africa was always supremely optimistic. The past 12
months have assuredly not been the best of times; the terrorist attacks on
September 11, the slowing of the global economy and the precipitous decline
in stock markets have seen to that. Tony Blair did his best for Africa at
last month's G8 summit in Kananaskis, but the brutal truth is that he didn't
get far. Downing Street aides were furious when Oxfam said Africa had been
offered "recycled peanuts", but that was about the strength of it. Blair,
Gordon Brown and - as we show on this page - Clare Short have been trying to
persuade other western nations to raise their game, but it is proving to be
a depressingly slow process. The annual human development report published
by the United Nations last week highlighted the extent of the problem. In
1990, at a previous international junket in Thailand, goals were set for
development that were to be hit by the end of the 20th century. Predictably,
once the world leaders were back home, nothing was done.
Going backwards
The date for achieving the targets was put back to 2015. Still, progress is
proving glacially slow, with some countries going backwards. At current
trends, according to the UN report*, it will take more than 130 years to rid
the world of hunger, while 81 countries, accounting for 60% of the world's
people, are not on track to reduce infant mortality by 2015. "Most
troubling, many of the countries least likely to achieve the goals are the
world's poorest: the least developed countries. And most are in sub-Saharan
Africa: 23 of the region's 44 countries are failing in most areas, and
another 11, such as Angola and Rwanda, have too little data to make a
judgment. "South Africa is the only country in the region where less than
10% of children are malnourished. In six countries - including Eritrea,
Ethiopia and Niger - the share is more than 40%. Without a dramatic
turnaround there is a real possibility that, a generation from now, world
leaders will be setting the same targets again." The famine in southern
Africa now threatens to put the millennium targets even further out of
reach. Nobody comes out of the present crisis with much credit. Clearly,
much of the blame lies with the Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe, which has turned
a country that exported maize to the rest of the region into a basket case
that cannot even feed itself. The problems in Malawi and Zambia are linked
to the drying-up of food supplies from Zimbabwe, but were compounded by the
decision, on the advice of the International Monetary Fund, to run down food
reserves. The fund's advice was well intentioned. Storing large quantities
of food is costly and inefficient; in a country with strong, non-corrupt
governance, it makes better sense to keep reserves in cash that can be used
to buy food on the world market.
Unfortunately, Zambia's government is weak and corrupt, so the reserves have
been plundered. As far as the international effort to combat the famine is
concerned, the mobilisation of support has come far, far too late. Western
governments, aid agencies and international organisations have all failed to
respond quickly enough, and have waited for the TV footage of dead and dying
children before doing anything. The extent of the hunger means that the
priority is to get large quantities of food to the area now. In the medium
term, there are lessons to be learned. Early warning systems need to be
improved, with better communication between the governments of southern
Africa, which sink or swim together. It should be recognised that some of
the ways in which domestic food markets have been deregulated - abandoning
the scheme which helped farmers affected by crop failure by giving them
seeds for the following year, for example - have been positively harmful.
Last but not least, the whole question of debt relief needs to be revisited.
As Oxfam has pointed out, under the Enhanced Heavily Indebted Poor Countries
(HIPC) Initiative, 26 countries are receiving debt relief, but half of them
are still spending 15% or more of government revenue on debt repayments.
These repayments are "crowding out" vital public investments in health,
education, and other areas. Thirteen of the 26 countries receiving debt
relief are still spending more on debt than on public health. Zambia and
Malawi have among the highest HIV/Aids prevalence rates in the world. But,
while Zambia has almost one million people affected, the country is spending
30% more on debt than on health. Malawi's health budget is equivalent to its
debt servicing."
One-sided deal
In the longer term, the sort of bargain that has been adumbrated over the
past year - financial help and more open markets in return for better
governance - makes sense. African leaders left Kananaskis convinced that
they were being offered a one-sided deal - clean up your governance and we
might consider helping you. They have every right to be cynical when they
hear warm words oozing out of western capitals. As the UN points out, in
1992 less than 10% of the global spending on health research addressed 90%
of the global disease burden. More than 50 years after the World Health
Organisation pledged to eradicate malaria, it still kills a million people a
year. Moreover, trade rules work against poor countries; on average,
industrial country tariffs on imports from developing countries are four
times those on imports from other industrial nations. In addition, those
countries that belong to the organisation for economic cooperation and
development provide about $1bn a day in domestic agricultural susbsidies -
more than six times what they spend on official development assistance for
developing countries. But there is little point in Africa bemoaning its
fate. Nobody ever said that the world is fair and, as the UN says, it makes
sense for Africa to embrace democracy and better governance whether or not
the west lives up to its promises. Democracy, says the UN, is the only
political regime that guarantees political and civil freedoms and the right
to participate - making democratic rule a good in itself. In addition, it
helps protect people from economic and political catastrophes such as
famines. "This is no small achievement. Indeed, it can be the difference
between life and death. India has not had a famine since 1947, despite
severe crop failures." Finally, the UN says that democratic governance can
trigger a virtuous circle of development - by empowering people to press for
policies that expand social and economic opportunities. All this is true.
Democracy will not save a single child in Africa over the coming months. But
it will save another generation in 2012 or 2022.
24. FOCUS ON SANITATION
SABC News
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,39609,00.html
Eight African Ministers of Water Affairs have committed themselves to
providing running water and sanitation to their people by 2015. This emerged
at an African Sanitation Conference in Sandton, where delegates heard that
more than half of the continent's people do not enjoy access to running
water or sanitation. On the eve of the World Summit in Sandton, some
residents of Alexandra towns hip, a stone's throw from the summit venue,
still suffer from water borne diseases and malnutrition. They have no access
to running water or sanitation. Margaret Zwane is one of the residents who
have been using the bucket system for the past 30 years. She shares her
toilet with her neighbours, exposing her children to diseases. African
governments are, however, unanimous that the problem facing Zwane and half
of the continent's people will soon be a thing of the past. Ronnie Kasrils,
the Water Affairs Minister, says: "This is the way to stop water borne
diseases such as dysentery and cholera that kill 6000 people,
internationally, a day and many of them are children." Nigeria, with a water
budget that is even more than that of the army, says it is confident the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) will bear results for the
continent.
Water debates at The Dome
One of the major venues for the world summit due next month is The Dome,
north of Johannesburg. It will host all events relating to water, one of the
world's most important resources. Today, The Dome's unique structure got a
drenching of water, to make sure it is absolutely fireproof. The 42 metre
high building already has 15 million litres of water under the floor for the
sprinkler system, but the organisers wanted to be absolutely safe. So today
four new water cannons were tested, creating a very appropriate scene for a
venue that will be known as the Water Dome during the summit. Mike Lord, the
venue manager, says: "Without a doubt, I think we have done some serious
planning in the last two months- we are looking forward to it. There's still
a lot to more planning to do- a lot more still to happen within the Water
Dome and we are looking forward to it." So while delegates discuss how to
provide water and sanitation for more than 1 billion people around the world
next month, they can be sure there will be plenty of water on standby.
25. DROUGHT IN AFRICA 'COULD BECOME A CATASTROPHE'
Daily Telegraph
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;$sessionid$MIUFNQAAAH4F3QFIQMGCFFOAVCBQUIV0?xml=/news/2002/07/29/wshort
29.xml&sSheet=/news/2002/07/29/ixnewstop.html&_requestid=304441
The drought in southern Africa could become a catastrophe because of
Zimbabwe's refusal to allow commercial imports of grain to enable better-off
Zimbabweans to feed themselves, Clare Short, the International Development
Secretary, warned yesterday.
She said 106 world leaders, including Tony Blair, attending next month's
Earth Summit in Johannesburg, could find their attempts to address the
effects of poverty on the world's environment overshadowed by a famine which
was at least partly man-made.
In an exclusive interview with The Telegraph, she said the worst drought in
southern Africa for 10 years was capable of becoming "a catastrophe" because
of the conduct of Robert Mugabe's ruling regime in Zimbabwe. The World Food
Programme has reported that two-thirds of the 3.2 million tons of food which
is now needed in Zimbabwe could be provided by commercial means - that is
bought by people who could afford it. More than half the people at risk from
the famine are in Zimbabwe, where seizures of white-owned farms by "war
veterans" and members of the ruling Zanu-PF party have devastated
agricultural output. Reports, confirmed at the weekend, showed that water is
available in dams but is not being used. Miss Short said she had volunteered
not to go to the Johannesburg summit, which is estimated to be using the
same amount of energy as nearly half a million Africans would use in a year.
But she was prevailed on to attend, along with a delegation of 70 ministers
and officials including John Prescott, the Deputy Prime Minister, because of
her close links with developing countries. Miss Short warned western
environmentalists like Friends of the Earth that it would be "immoral" if
their concerns about globalisation were to derail an agreement that could
help the 2.4 billion people without proper sanitation over the next 15
years. "Poor countries want multinationals. They want modern
telecommunications. They want water and sanitation systems. Of course
multinationals can be irresponsible, but they supply the modern technology
of the world," she said. She also praised big companies who were becoming
more aware of their responsibilities towards the populations of developing
countries. "If the Johannesburg summit went wrong we would have a nasty
international atmosphere," she concluded. Success, however, would provide
"a united international endeavour to deliver what has to be delivered if our
kids and our grandchildren are going to have any kind of decent Earth to
live on".
26. POLITICAL CLIMATE COOLS FOR FIGHT ON GLOBAL WARMING
Reuters
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://asia.reuters.com/news_article.jhtml;jsessionid=AH0NQLGF5I4G4CRBAEOCFEY?type=topnews&StoryID=1260880
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The world woke up to global warming at the 1992 Rio
Earth summit, but 10 years on, what some consider the planet's biggest
environmental danger has fallen off the agenda of a major follow-up
conference.
Next month's summit of world leaders in Johannesburg will focus on poverty,
not pollution -- a worry for some environmentalists who say the poor will
suffer first if climate change is not stopped. In Rio de Janeiro a decade
ago, leaders took the landmark decision to try to stop rising emissions of
the greenhouse gases which trap heat in the atmosphere, and created the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. U.N. scientists said
the build-up of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere since the Industrial
Revolution was trapping heat in the atmosphere. They predicted major climate
disruption if emissions were not cut. Five years later, with emissions
still rising, countries beefed up the convention with the Kyoto Protocol
which contained binding targets on emissions reduction for industrialised
countries. But the pact has yet to come into force and the United States
put its future in doubt when it pulled out last year. "If you look at the
record since Rio, climate change is the most glaring failure," said Rob
Bradley of the campaign group Climate Action Network. "Countries took a
commitment to stabilise emissions and then promptly didn't do it. That gave
the lie to the idea that countries were there because they realised how
serious it all was."
U.S. CLOUD OVER SUMMIT
Kyoto can still survive without the world's biggest producer of greenhouse
gases, but not until Russia ratifies, supplying the required number of
developed countries for it to take effect. That is not expected for another
several months. While Kyoto's supporters are disappointed it will not be in
force before the summit, they blame U.S. influence for the fact that climate
change is barely mentioned on the agenda. "EPA (U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency) officials told me the American administration preferred
to have climate change not at all on the agenda at Johannesburg, to instead
focus on water," said European Parliament member Alex de Roo. "What do you
see? The first item on the agenda is water. The second is energy, which has
some climate implications, but the word climate isn't mentioned. That's the
cloud of the Bush administration hanging over the Johannesburg summit." But
other Kyoto supporters are happy that the treaty will not be the centre of
attention at Johannesburg. "We more or less have solved the negotiations.
To have major discussions again in Johannesburg would perhaps give the
impression that something more has to be done," said Jan Pronk, the former
Dutch environment minister who chaired the key climate negotiations before
and after the U.S. withdrawal. Pronk, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's
special envoy to help prepare the summit, wants to see Washington return to
the treaty, but said any such discussions at Johannesburg "would not be very
useful" because they would be unlikely to succeed.
ENVIRONMENT VS DEVELOPMENT?
The summit's focus on fighting poverty reflects the overriding concern of
developing countries where scourges such as water-borne diseases, malaria
and AIDS, which kill millions every year, appear far more menacing than
global warming. Many scientists say climate change will exacerbate those
problems. Research over the past 10 years has given scientists a better idea
of what effects global warming could have on water supplies, agriculture and
population migrations. While some scientists are sceptical about climate
change and its effects, a broad-based U.N. scientific panel has predicted
that unchecked emissions could raise global temperatures by between 1.4 and
5.8 degrees Celsius this century. Reports of coral bleaching and melting
ice sheets have indicated that global warming may be well under way. Mick
Kelly, an atmospheric scientist at Britain's University of East Anglia, said
policymakers would have to take on board detailed forecasts of the impact of
climate change on populations to enable countries to cope. "Whatever
politicians may do, some degree of climate change is inevitable and
therefore we have to plan to adapt," he said. While Rio and Kyoto were
about reducing the emissions blamed for causing climate change, more
emphasis was now needed on ensuring countries can manage the consequences,
for example, by protecting themselves from sea level rises, Kelly said. "It
has to be a twin track strategy." Some analysts believe Johannesburg could
deliver results for the fight against climate change, both by helping poorer
states develop so they can tackle the impact of global warming, and by
getting them to develop more cleanly than rich countries did. A push for
renewable energy, for example, could reduce the greenhouse gas emissions
that would inevitably come from a greater use of fossil fuels in the
developing world. "(Climate change) is on the agenda to the extent that
they are addressing the future energy requirements of developing countries,"
said Jacqueline Karas, climate change research fellow at London's Royal
Institute for International Affairs. "It may seem that climate change is a
less immediate problem than tackling poverty, but on issues like water
supply, which is susceptible to climate change, the most vulnerable
countries are those in the tropics and the south." So although water,
sanitation and energy for the poor will top the agenda at Johannesburg,
climate change will not far from people's minds, Karas said. "It will be
climate change by another name."
27. ZUMA CALLS FOR TECHNOLOGY-DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP
BuaNews via All Africa
28 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207290668.html
Deputy President Jacob Zuma has called for a partnership between technology
and development, with the potential benefits rooted in a pro-development
strategy. He reiterated the findings of the UN Human Development Report of
2001, which stated that science and technology had the potential to realise
in a decade what could have been achieved in generations in the past. The
Deputy Pesident was addressing delegates at the African, Caribbean and
Pacific (ACP) Ministerial Forum on Research for Sustainable Development in
Cape Town today. 'We need to find ways of making science and technology work
for development,' he said, adding that it was the only way in which new
technologies and innovations could bring about positive changes in the lives
of millions of people in the developing world. He said it was urgent that
the partnership be embraced 'especially since technology itself has become a
source of, and an engine for economic growth, as evidenced by the
international success of technology-based clusters.'
Moreover, Mr Zuma said it was relevant that delegates from the European
Union (EU) participated in the Forum ahead of the envisaged joint
ministerial gathering later this year. 'We trust that the Forum will provide
officials with an appropriate mandate to ensure that during the discussion,
a solid foundation is laid for the ACP-EU ministerial gathering,' he said.
The Forum, which takes place weeks before the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) to be held in Johannesburg, is aimed at expressing
political commitment to strengthen ACP-EU co-operation in science and
technology relevant to society. The event ends on Tuesday.
28. NGO'S URGED TO PARTICIPATE AT U.N SUMMIT
e-Taiwan News
27 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.etaiwannews.com/Taiwan/2002/07/27/1027736435.htm
A coalition of Taiwanese environmental activist groups have called for
greater efforts to promote international networking and participation by
local NGO's at the United Nations World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD) to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa from August 26 to September
4 this year. These were some of the recommendations and points of
discussion as government officials from the forestry and agricultural
departments joined representatives from a number of environmental
organizations at a round-table forum yesterday to foster exchanges of ideas
and to formulate a new policy planning. Organized by the Society of
Wilderness, the event yesterday is part of a series of public forums being
held to support and publicize the environmental coalition's goal of taking
part in the U.N. World Summit on Sustainable Development. The forum dealt
with several of the U.N.'s ongoing programs such as the WSSD, the Convention
on Biodiversity, forest preservation projects, and other international
environmental movements. Legislator Chao Jung-ching, Director of the
Forestry Council Yu Star Huang, representative from the Cabinet's Committee
for Sustainable Development Wang Hsin, and NGO representatives spoke of the
need for Taiwan's groups to co-ordinate better in their work, to take a
greater role in the international network of environmental organizations and
to discuss the importance of participating at the upcoming global summit
conferences. Focused on setting up global action plans and a strategy for
sustainable development, the Johannesburg Summit 2002 looks at the results
of implementation, progress of the agenda, and programs adopted at the 1992
Earth Summit in Rio. It also evaluates new goals for the international
environmental movement.
29. MINISTER ADVISES GOVT OVER PROTECTION OF EARTH RESOURCES
Vanguard (Lagos) via All Africa
27 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207270106.html
Minister of Environment, Alhaji Muhammad Kabir Sa'id Thursday advised that
federal government should not shy away from the reality that the world has
become a global village of which all nations of the world, both developed
and under-developed countries have a role to play in the protection and
equitable utilisation of the earth's resources. Alhaji Sa'id gave this
advice at the opening session of the National Forum on Sustainable
Development, held at Nicon Hotel Abuja. He noted that a recent report from
United Nations illustrates vividly the imbalance in the consumption pattern
of the earth's resources. "The report reveals that only 15 per cent of the
world population, in high income countries, account for 56 per cent of the
world's total consumption, while the poorest 40 per cent, in low-income
countries, account for only 11 per cent," he said adding, "while most people
consume more today, the consumption expenditure of average African household
is 20 per cent less than it was 25 years ago!" The minister pointed out that
it is in realization of the enormous problem facing the continent and the
need to take charge of the country's destiny that some African initiatives
have emerged to reverse the trend. Alhaji Sa'id stated that Mr. President,
in order to ensure sustainable environment, pioneered the creation of a new
African-led initiative known as the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD). Among the objective of NEPAD, he noted are to eradicate poverty and
place African countries, both individual and collectively, on a path of
sustainable growth and development; to halt the marginalisation of African
in globalisation process and to restore peace, security and stability in the
continent. "NEPAD creates a new framework of cooperation between Africa and
the rest of the global community, based on the agenda set by African people
throughout their own volition and initiatives to chart their own course and
shape their destiny," he said. The minister stated that ten years after
UNCED, that a World Summit on Sustainable Development will be held in
Africa. "More importantly, African and ways to solve her problems have
become part of the main agenda of the summit, the issue to be addressed at
the summit are very paramount to African Development," he stressed.
30. LOCAL USAID BOSS SAYS AGENCY COMMITTED TO ENVIRONMENTAL PROJECTS
Jamaica Observer
27 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20020726T210000-0500_29517_OBS_LOCAL_USAID_BOSS_SAYS_AGENCY_COMMITTED_TO_ENVIRONMENTAL_PROJECTS.asp
WESTERN BUREAU -- Mosina Jordan, mission director at the United States
Agency of International Development (USAID), has reaffirmed her
organisation's commitment to supporting a relationship tourism and the
environment activities, in order to achieve sustainable economic development
in Jamaica and the rest of the region. "USAID has been working with our
partners to help Caribbean countries harness tourism's benefits and
incentives in a way that is environmentally sound and economically viable,
as well as socially responsible and culturally appropriate," she said. "I
would like to reaffirm USAID's commitment to making a difference, to
protecting the natural resource base and to ensuring that the work we are
doing will hold promise for a viable future," Jordan said. The USAID
director who was speaking yesterday at the official opening of the Green
Hotel Conference and Exhibition in Montego Bay, said the USAID's approach to
sustainable tourism involved a number of "inter-related" issues. She listed
the promotion of environmental management systems in the sector to include
the adoption of voluntary certification schemes like the Green Globe 21
hotel certification programme, as one of the issues. Since 1998 when Negril
Cabins became the first hotel in the world to be certified under the
programme, 25 other Jamaican and Caribbean hotels have been certified
through the Environmental Audits for Sustainable Tourism (EAST) project. Ten
others are to be evaluated for certification before yearend. EAST was
launched in 1997 to prove the benefits of improved environmental management
in the hotel and manufacturing sectors. The first phase saw 14 Negril hotels
subjected to environmental audits, training in environmental management
systems and the audit of 10 manufacturing facilities in Kingston/St Andrew.
Then in 1998/99, the USAID funded programme was extended to include
additional hotel and manufacturing audits, the Green Globe 21 certification
programme, economic incentives and financial analysis and the development of
an institutional plan for the Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association to
sustain the project's efforts. Jordan said yesterday that the task of
implementing environmental practices inside the industry was one that
required the exercise of "corporate responsibility". "The importance of
corporate responsibility cannot be overemphasized," she said, adding that it
extended beyond a willingness to adopt voluntary certification programmes.
"(It) also means the incorporation of local communities as equal partners in
the process... (It) is the concept that enterprise is accountable for its
impact on all relevant stakeholders... the continuing commitment by business
to behave fairly and responsibly and contribute to economic development..."
Jordan said, adding that the time to act was now. "As much as this green
hotel conference and the worldwide summit on sustainable development provide
a good opportunity for reflection, its also time for implementation of the
policies and practices of sustainable tourism development and the
achievement of concrete results," she said.
31. REPORT LAUDS ENVIRONMENTAL EFFORTS OF FIVE CORPORATIONS
Taipei Times
27 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/2002/07/27/story/0000153720
GLOBAL PUSH: A report to be presented at a UN summit will feature companies
that yielded financial gains after implementing environmentally sound
business practices. To demonstrate that "doing good" can yield financial
gains, Taiwan will present the successful experiences of five enterprises
and their investments in environmental protection at the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD) next month in Johannesburg, South Africa.
According to Developing Value: The Business Case for Sustainability in
Emerging Markets -- published on July 17 by the International Finance
Corporation (IFC, a member of World Bank Group), the strategy consultants
SustainAbility and Ethos Institute in Brazil -- five Taiwanese enterprises
that implemented environmentally sound policies benefitted financially from
their investments. The book is regarded as the first large-scale study of
developing countries that proves companies can post financial gains while
pursuing sustainability. The book presents 240 cases based on the practices
of 176 companies, ranging from family-owned companies to multinationals in
over 60 countries in Africa, Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle
East and Latin America. The material covers a wide range of business sectors
such as agriculture, manufacturing, infrastructure and information
technology. The five Taiwanese enterprises with outstanding achievements for
promoting sustainable development listed in the report are Acer Incorporated
Cheng Loong Corp, Inventec Corp, Uni-President Corp and United
Microelectronics Corp."Taiwan's private sector achievement of ensuring
sustainability will be heard by the world at the summit," Niven Huang
secretary-general of the Business Council for Sustainable Development,
Taiwan told the Taipei Times. The UN summit designates Sept. 1 as Business
Day to highlight the key role played by businesses in promoting sustainable
development. On Aug. 30, Huang said, the council will join the World
Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) to present the study at
the WBCSD's regional network event. According to the report, Acer made
significant efforts to reduce pollution and negative impacts to the
environment. Acer has adjusted its production process in a way that saves
resources and reduces the amount of industrial waste. As a result of its
environmental improvements, Acer saved approximately US$35,000 on cleaner
production, US$125,000 on pollution control, US$250,000 in energy costs,
US$1 million on material replacement and US$1.7 million on design changes in
1998. Similarly, the report said, the results of the Cheng Loong
Corporation's waste-minimization efforts between 1996 and 1999 increased
savings from NT$95 million (US$2.8 million) in 1996 to NT$155 million
(US$4.6 million) in 1999. Inventec, the report said, saves on average
NT$11.77 million (US$350,000) per year by implementing diverse strategies
such as waste recycling, waste solvent reduction and energy conservation. In
addition, the report said that Uni-President Corp saved a total of US$2.5
million in 1998 by improving energy efficiency and reducing the amount of
its industrial waste. In 1998 UMC, according to the report, saved the
equivalent of 6.3 percent of their revenue that year. The company saved
US$10,000 by cleaning up its production processes, US$1,000 by improving its
operational efficiency and US$22,000 through recycling and reuse.
"Taiwanese enterprises have to realize that internalizing environmental
costs and benefits will become a worldwide trend," Huang told the Taipei
Times. Huang stressed that there are compelling commercial reasons for
enterprises to carry out environmental sound investments to ensure business
sustainability. Due to Taiwan's entry into the WTO, Huang said, overseas
consumers' concern about the environmental friendliness of products and
packaging can no longer be neglected. Officials of the Industrial
Development Bureau (IDB) under the Ministry of Economic Affairs said that
the promotion of sustainable development in Taiwan was actually driven by
both the government and the private sector. Shih Yen-hsi division director
of IDB's Sustainable Development Division, told the Taipei Times that in a
bid to convince Taiwan's industries of the need for sustainable development,
the bureau had proposed policies that focused on environmental labeling,
promoting industrial waste reduction and encouraging clean production. To
make sure that Taiwan's industry becomes fully integrated with the global
market, contradictions in existing policies should be eliminated, Shih said.
"When Taiwan is exploring its business opportunities overseas, incomplete
environmental policies often intimidate foreign enterprises," Shih said.
Before the Waste Disposal Act was revised last October, CEOs' liabilities
for illegal dumping by contracted waste handlers was unacceptable. Shih said
that using resources reasonably would be Taiwan's top priority when adopting
strategies to make the nation sustainable. "We should consider promoting
renewable-energy industries by adjusting out-of-date polices when we are
faced with the controversy surrounding nuclear energy," Shih said. On
Wednesday, the Cabinet's committee for promoting sustainable development
confirmed that, beginning next year, sustainable development indicators
would be published annually.
32. ENVIRONMENTAL LAWYERS TO MEET IN CITY
Natal Witness
27 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.witness.co.za/showcontent.asp?id=8450&action=full&catid=6
Some of the foremost environmental lawyers in the world will attend an
environmental law conference in the city before the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg next month. The conference,
due to start on August 19 at the University of Natal, will be attended by
internationally renowned environmental lawyers such as Charles Okidi
(Kenya), Parvez Hassan (Pakistan), Eckard Rehbinder (Germany), Wang Xi
(China) and Ben Boer (Australia). The lawyers will discuss legal dimensions
of the issues to be discussed at the Summit, following an an agreement
between the World Conservation Union Commission on Environmental Law (IUCN)
and the Institute and Law School in Pietermaritzburg. Since the initial
discussions, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has come on
board as one of the co-sponsors. The conference, entitled 'Environmental Law
Foundations for Sustainable Development' will take stock of environmental
law as it enters the 21st Century, assess the measures that need to be taken
at the Summit, and discuss the future agenda for legal measures essential
for attaining sustainable development. Issues such as environmental ethics,
public participation, ecology and the law, climate change, biodiversity
conservation, desertification, trade and the environment, capacity building,
and related topics will be discussed.
Recommendations from the conference will be submitted to the summit
discussions the following week, while papers will be collected and published
in a special edition of the South African Journal of Environmental Law and
Policy.
The conference programme is on the CEL website at:
http://www.iucn.org/themes/law/bubo01.html
33. UNION LEADER LOOKS FORWARD TO WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Canada NewsWire
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FD20020726730000122.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
OTTAWA, Jul 26, 2002 (Canada NewsWire via COMTEX) -- Tim Secord is a key
labour organizer for the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.
Secord has logistical responsibilities for the 2,000 member labour
delegation attending Earth Summit II, the United Nations' World Summit on
Sustainable Development. The Summit will take place in Johannesburg, South
Africa from 26 August to 4 September 2002. "Workers from around the world
are bringing an agenda to the Summit," Secord says. Tim Secord is the
Canadian Legislative Director of the United Transportation Union. The UTU
represents 8,500 Canadian workers in the rail and bus industries.
34. EU SETS OUT AGENDA FOR THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Europa World
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.europaworld.org/week92/eusetsout26702.htm
The European Commission gave further details this week of its approach and
agenda for the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), saying that
it represented both an important opportunity and a heavy responsibility for
world leaders. The challenge was to deliver on the promises of the Rio Earth
Summit and on the Millennium Development goals in order to eradicate
poverty, improve living standards based on sustainable patterns of
production and consumption and to ensure that the benefits of globalisation
are shared by all. Developed and developing countries share joint
responsibility for implementing these goals which will require substantially
increased efforts, both by countries themselves and by the international
community. In two recent major global conferences, the international
community adopted the Doha Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus as
a framework for improving market access, for upgrading multilateral rules to
harness globalisation, and for mobilising additional financial resources for
development. The developed countries must now deliver on their commitments
and the EU is fully determined to do so. The developing countries must meet
their responsibilities by improving internal policies and domestic
governance and creating an enabling climate for trade and investment. Growth
must be decoupled from environmental degradation and measures must be taken
to ensure that the needs of the present generation are satisfied without
destroying the capacity of later generations to cater for their own future
needs.
What does the EU want from the World Summit?
The EU wants the World Summit to agree on further steps towards the
implementation of the Millennium Development Goals, especially in areas such
as sanitation and energy. The European Union wishes to see the WSSD adopt
quantifiable targets, implementation timetables and monitoring mechanisms.
One of the means to implement the objectives of the plan of action which
should be agreed in Johannesburg could be well-developed partnerships
between governments, the private sector and civil society. The EU also wants
the Summit in Johannesburg to send a clear political message on the need to
make globalisation more sustainable for all and to agree on measures aimed
at promoting this goal.
What is the EU proposing to the WSSD?
The EU supports the proposals of the UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, that
the World Summit should make progress in five key areas water, energy,
health, agriculture and biodiversity. The EU is proposing targets and
actions in a number of specific areas, in support of the Millennium
Development Goal of halving the proportion of people living in extreme
poverty by 2015.
Sustainable consumption and production The EU is in favour of developing a
ten-year work programme to accelerate the shift towards sustainable
consumption and production. Industrialised countries should take the lead in
changing their unsustainable behaviour towards more resource efficient
production processes and lifestyles. Product life-cycle approaches,
eco-labelling of products and environmental impact assessments are useful
tools in that regard. Appropriate means should be made available to help
developing countries to move towards the same objective.
Clean water and sanitation
Today 1.2 billion people lack access to clean water and 3 billion people do
not have access to safe sanitation. It is estimated that 2.2 million people,
mostly children, die each year from diseases associated with lack of access
to safe drinking water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene. To tackle
this gigantic problem the EU wants to contribute to halve the proportion of
people without access to clean water and sanitation by 2015. To help deliver
this target the European Union has developed a Water Initiative, which, in
partnership with countries and regions, can bring together public and
private funds, stakeholders and experts to provide long term, sustainable
solutions to problems of water management. Meeting the political goal would
make a major contribution to improved health and economic development. The
EU has already allocated 1.4 billion as of 2002 and is ready to increase
this figure for the following years within the context of partners' poverty
reduction strategies.
Energy
The European Union wants the Summit to decide on actions to increase the
global share of renewable energy sources to at least 15% of primary energy
supply by 2010 to improve energy efficiency and to enhance the use of
cleaner, more efficient fossil fuel technologies. Around 2 billion people in
the world do not have access to modern energy services. The provision of
affordable, sustainable energy services will have a major impact on poverty,
health, economic and social development; access to sustainable energy
services is thus a pre-condition for the achievement of the Millennium
Development Goals. The World Summit should adopt an action plan to achieve
this goal. The EU is preparing an "Energy for Poverty Eradication and
Sustainable Development" Initiative to develop partnerships with interested
developing countries in an open dialogue, to identify their energy needs and
ways to meet these needs. EU development co-operation programmes combined
with the involvement of financial institutions, the private sector and civil
society should contribute to achieving the MDGs. The EU has already
allocated around 700 million per year through Member State and Commission
development co-operation programmes to energy. This figure could increase in
future years based on requests from developing countries for 2003. The EU is
ready to increase this figure for the following years within the context of
their developing country partners' poverty reduction strategies.
Health
The European Union wants to combat the spread of communicable diseases and
increase investment in health care. The EU will increase the volume of
development assistance targeting improved health over the next five years
and has already up to 120 million available for this purpose for 2002.
Within the Doha Development Agenda, World Trade Organisation (WTO) members
should resolve differences on compulsory licenses and work for
pharmaceutical products to be made available to the developing world at the
lowest possible prices. The EU invites the international community to join
partnerships for research on new generations of products. It will continue
to actively participate in the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria and
tuberculosis.
Natural resources and bio-diversity
At present 25% of mammal species and 11% of bird species are at significant
risk of extinction. The Union is determined to halt and reverse the current
loss of natural resources and bio-diversity by 2015 and to manage natural
resources in a sustainable and integrated manner. This global objective
should lead to incentives for local communities, in particular in developing
countries, to benefit from the conservation and sustainable use of their
rich variety of natural resources. The EU is in the process of reforming its
fisheries policy, with the aim of reducing fleets and total catch, and calls
on other countries to do the same in order to restore stocks to sustainable
levels at the latest by 2015.
Globalisation, finance, trade and aid
The European Union will continue to promote a positive agenda for
globalisation, finance and trade. Important steps to ensure that
globalisation benefit all have recently been taken through the Doha
Development Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus. The achievements of these
conferences should not be put into question in Johannesburg but ways and
means to build upon them should be identified. As an example in
Johannesburg, the EU is putting forward a number of positive and supportive
measures on trade and investment, outside the scope of Doha Development
Agenda and the Monterrey Consensus, which specifically would contribute to
sustainable development in developing countries. These measures include the
creation of conditions to promote investment flows to developing countries,
corporate responsibility and accountability and promotion of investments in
support of sustainable development through export credits and investment
guarantee schemes.
As a first significant step towards reaching the objective of giving 0,7% of
countries Gross National Income as Official Development Assistance (ODA),
the EU and its Member States have pledged to bring the Union average from
0.31% to 0.39% by 2006. This will result in additional ODA of about 22
billion between 2002 and 2006 and a further annual 9 billion Euro as of
2006.
The EU has initiated steps to make available this increased funding
announced at the International Conference for Financing for Development in
Monterrey and hopes that other donors will equally make good on their
pledges. Recipient and donor countries, as well as international
institutions, also have to make a common effort to make ODA more efficient
and effective. The EU will intensify its efforts in that regard.
Global public goods
The European Union is ready to explore ways with all partners, on top of
opening markets and increasing the level and effectiveness of ODA, of
generating new public and innovative sources of finance for development
purposes. A further discussion and exploration of the issue of global public
goods will be crucial in this context. It is in that spirit that the EU is
supporting the idea of creating an intergovernmental process to further
discuss the matter at the global level.
A global public good can be defined as a good which has universal benefits,
covers more than a group of countries, and is beneficial for; several or
preferably all population groups, both current and future generations, or at
least meets the needs of the current generation without jeopardising the
needs of future generations. Examples of global common goods are
communicable disease control, persistent pollution control, the ozone layer
and the Earth's climate system, bio-diversity and genetic resources and
peace and security.
Debt sustainability
The EU will also pursue efforts to restore debt sustainability in the
context of the enhanced Highly Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) initiative, so
that poor countries can pursue growth and development unconstrained by
unsustainable debt dynamics. The EU also recognise that some non-HIPC low
income countries face extraordinary circumstances and that there might be
the need on a case by case basis, to provide additional assistance.
Effective institutions
The EU supports the development of an effective institutional framework for
sustainable development at international, regional and national levels. At
international level, it is necessary to:
- strengthen the role of United Nations Economic and Social Council in the
follow-up to the WSSD
- give more emphasis to implementation issues in the work of the Commission
for Sustainable Development,
- to reinforce co-operation on sustainable development between UN bodies,
the Bretton Woods institutions and the World Trade Organisation.
Implementation of national strategies and the development of more effective
institutional frameworks for sustainable development at regional and
sub-regional level are also important priorities for the EU, as is access to
information (implementation of the Rio Principle 10).
Further details on the EU initiatives mentioned in this note are available
from
http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/wssd
35. U.S. WILL "WORK TIRELESSLY TO ENSURE" SUCCESSFUL SUMMIT
Washington File
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/global/develop/02072601.htm
Washington -- The implementation of longtime sustainable development goals
should be the focus of talks at the upcoming World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg, South Africa, says Anthony Wayne, the
U.S. Department of State's assistant secretary of state for economic and
business affairs. "With the blueprint from Rio, the Millennium Declaration,
and the outcomes of these recent conferences in hand, we must focus our
efforts in Johannesburg on implementation -- focusing on concrete actions to
achieve the ambitious sustainable development goals we have already set for
ourselves," Wayne said. The WSSD, which will take place August 26 to
September 4, is a 10-year follow-up to the 1992 U.N. Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED), held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Wayne
was one of several speakers who participated in panel discussions July 25 on
sustainable development issues and the upcoming summit. The discussions,
held at the Brazilian Embassy in Washington, were hosted by the embassy and
the Worldwatch Institute, an independent, non-government environmental and
social policy research organization. Wayne said that delegates at the summit
in Johannesburg will work to finalize two texts, a plan of implementation
and a political declaration. He said that although there are differences, he
believes consensus can be reached.
"While we made progress in Bali, especially in key areas such as
agriculture, forests, oceans, water, and health, substantial differences on
text remain," he said. "These differences should not be insurmountable."
Wayne also said that the "critical role" of partnerships in implementing
sustainable development will receive "unprecedented attention" at the
Johannesburg summit.
"Partnerships among governments, civil society, and the private sector are
key to mobilizing development resources and unleashing human potential, to
reducing poverty, promoting healthy environments, and fostering sustainable
growth," Wayne said. "To this end, the United States will work for concrete
action in seven areas we believe are essential to sustainable development:
health, energy, water, sustainable agriculture and rural development,
education, oceans and coastal management, and forests. We invite other
governments and stakeholders to join us in partnership in these efforts."
James Connaughton, chairman of the White House Council on Environmental
Quality, was also on the panel. He spoke on parts of the developing world
that have improved dramatically in recent decades. "We should be looking at
those successes and trying to amplify and replicate them," Connaughton said.
He noted that progress depends critically on certain "necessary but not
sufficient conditions: ... ruling justly, investing in people, and promoting
economic freedoms." Connaughton also said that the world must recognize that
each nation has to be responsible for its own development. "That doesn't
mean they go it alone, but each nation has to take that task onto itself and
look at sustainability because it is through that commitment that the
partners around the world can join, and now there is confidence that the
investments of the day are in fact themselves sustainable for the future."
Another panel member, Secretary-General of the WSSD Nitin Desai, talked
about previous development meetings held in Doha and Monterrey, and how
Johannesburg is the third meeting on sustainable development. "I think it is
very important that we understand the political significance of a successful
outcome in Johannesburg," Desai said. "I would like to see Johannesburg as
the critical third leg of the strengthening of multilateralism that we have
had in the past." Desai said that everyone must remember that the goals for
Johannesburg are not just about what developing countries have to do, but
also about what industrialized countries have to do in terms of sustainable
consumption and production and what all countries have to do together in
terms of ecosystems management. He also said there is no major global event
planned beyond Johannesburg that would allow the international community to
achieve agreement on sustainable development issues. "It is very important
that we engage constructively in an output in Johannesburg that is
recognized by people as a forward step of action," Desai said. Wayne said:
"In cooperation with Brazil and under the able leadership of South Africa,
the United States will work tirelessly to ensure that the Johannesburg
Summit is a success." Alan Hecht, director of international environmental
affairs, National Security Council/Council on Environmental Quality, was not
on the panel, but he answered questions from the audience. "This meeting
[WSSD in Johannesburg] has to be successful, and I know everyone I'm working
with feels the same way," Hecht said. In response to a question about the
Millennium Challenge Account (MCA), Hecht said it is too early and not wise
to start saying where money might go or how it may be used. Hecht did say
that the MCA -- President Bush's proposal of an additional $5,000 million a
year in official U.S. development aid specifically targeting poor countries
that can use the money effectively -- is a very important announcement with
"enormous opportunities."
"The administration is now reviewing the criteria that it will use in
consultation with a wide range of people in the development community as to
what might be the elements of the criteria for the countries to meet the
Millennium Challenge Account," Hecht said. "The administration is also
reviewing which countries might meet those. The administration is also
working with Congress to be able to craft this new initiative with a minimum
amount of constraint, and those dialogues are currently going on."
The other members of the first panel were Xolisa Mabhongo, political
counselor at the South African Permanent Mission to the United Nations;
Maria Luiza Ribeiro Viotti, minister plenipotentiary of the Permanent
Mission of Brazil to the United Nations and vice-chairperson of the Bureau
of the Preparatory Committee for the WSSD; and Jan Pronk, special advisor to
Kofi Annan on the WSSD. The second panel's members were John Waugh, World
Conservation Union; Suani Coelho, Sao Paulo State Secretariat of the
Environment; Sandra Postel, Global Water Policy Project and Worldwatch
Institute senior fellow; Brian Halweil, Worldwatch Institute; and Nancy
Alexander, Citizens Network on Essential Services. After the panel members'
speeches and a question-and-answer period, a reception was held at the South
African Embassy. Brazilian Ambassador Rubens A. Barbosa and South African
Ambassador Sheila Sisulu welcomed the crowd and thanked them for their hard
work and their interest in making the WSSD in Johannesburg a success.
36. UN OFFICIAL URGES BUSH TO ATTEND THE WORLD SUMMIT
SABC News
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,39389,00.html
Can George W.Bush afford to miss the World Summit? A senior United Nations
(UN) official is stepping up the pressure on the American president to
attend the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), the
UN Secretary-General's special envoy for the summit says. He was speaking at
a conference in Washington, looking ahead to the Johannesburg gathering. The
Brazilian embassy was the venue for the latest event to mark the passing of
the torch from Brazil, which hosted the World Summit a decade ago, to South
Africa. Jan Pronk, the envoy, says: "The President of the United States
cannot afford not to be there. It will not be understood in other
countries". However, Sean McCormack, the US National Security Council
spokesperson, says: "We don't have anything to announce with regard to the
President's schedule in August." While South African officials express
optimism about the summit, the event at the Brazilian embassy also laid bare
some of the remaining divisions and illustrated the extent to which those
disagreements are about fundamental issues.
37. BLAIR AND 70 OFFICIALS TO ATTEND EARTH SUMMIT
Daily Telegraph
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.dailytelegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/07/26/nbul26.xml&secureRefresh=true&_requestid=305017
Britain is to field a delegation of 70 at the Johannesburg Earth Summit next
month including Tony Blair, at least two Cabinet ministers and officials
from five government departments. The announcement follows controversy over
the planned delegation of 44 ministers and officials who were due to attend
a preliminary meeting in Bali. In the event, only about 30 attended. Some
106 world leaders will be going to the summit, in late August and early
September. Margaret Beckett, the Environment Secretary and one of the
delegates, said yesterday that President Bush was not expected to say
whether he would attend until the last minute. Michael Meacher, environment
minister, and Clare Short, International Development Secretary, are also
expected to attend the summit, which will discuss world poverty and the
environment.
38. SUMMIT TEXTS WILL BE READY, OFFICIALS SAY
UN Wire
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.unfoundation.org/unwire/2002/07/26/current.asp#27922
WASHINGTON -- U.N. and U.S. officials said yesterday that the final
declaration and action plan for the World Summit on Sustainable Development
-- two texts that are still incomplete after the collapse last month of the
final summit preparatory talks in Bali, Indonesia -- will be agreed on
despite sharp differences among countries over economic and environmental
priorities.
Opening a Worldwatch Institute-sponsored seminar at the Brazilian Embassy
here, the institute's president, Christopher Flavin, called the Bali talks
"difficult" and stressed the scale of changes rich and poor countries alike
are being asked to make to stem environmental degradation and promote
development around the world. But Nitin Desai, the secretary general for
the Aug. 26-Sept. 4 Johannesburg summit, said he noted "virtually no sense
of confrontation or in-your-face-type statements" at a New York meeting
called last week by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to try to work out
some of the differences stalling talks on the summit texts. Desai said all
the differences among countries are negotiable, and James Connaughton,
chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, agreed.
"We're working on the texts. We will complete the texts," Connaughton said
yesterday of the declaration and action plan. Another U.S. official,
Assistant Undersecretary of State for Economic, Business and Agricultural
Affairs Anthony Wayne, concurred that the remaining differences are "not
insurmountable." Wayne said President George W. Bush's administration has
pledged "to work hard to achieve agreement." Developing country
representatives at yesterday's seminar offered no such reassurances. Xolisa
Mabhongo of the South African U.N. Mission was a panelist, as was Maria
Luiza Ribeiro Viotti of the Brazilian U.N. Mission, who is also vice
chairwoman of the Bureau of the Preparatory Committee for the World Summit.
Neither commented on the texts being negotiated. On the level of
representation countries are planning to send to Johannesburg, Worldwatch
chief Flavin spoke of a "rapidly growing list of heads of state," predicting
that more than 100 heads of state and government will be in attendance and
that the list will "probably include the heads of almost all the most
influential governments around the world." The head of the world's most
important economic powerhouse and biggest polluter may not be among them:
U.S. Undersecretary of State for Economic, Business and Agricultural Affairs
Alan Larson said "no decision has been made" on Bush's attendance, although
he acknowledged the decision "is above my pay grade."
"There will be a good, strong delegation," Larson said in response to a
question about whether Bush or another high-ranking official, such as
Secretary of State Colin Powell, will lead the U.S. delegation to
Johannesburg. Desai, Others Stress Implementation
Following Desai's lead, all the speakers at yesterday's event stressed that
the Johannesburg summit should be about implementation, building on November
World Trade Organization talks held in Doha, Qatar, and on new commitments
rich countries made in the context of the International Conference on
Financing for Development, held in March in Monterrey, Mexico.
Desai said he "would like to see Johannesburg as the critical third leg of
the ... multilateralism that we have had" in Doha and Monterrey.
Participants in Johannesburg, he added, should "flesh out the Millennium
Development Goals" and decide what to do with the commitments of Doha and
Monterrey -- commitments he said would be rendered meaningless if the
Johannesburg summit fails. "What people are looking for is not necessarily
new ... concepts ... but concrete programs of action," Desai said.
All the speakers who followed took up that theme. Jan Pronk, Annan's
special adviser on the summit, said Johannesburg "has to concentrate on
implementation and action." Pronk called on countries to render
"operational" treaties on climate, biodiversity and harmful chemicals that
are now at various stages leading to enactment.
Subsidies, Partnerships Addressed
Several speakers took up the controversial issues of rich countries'
agricultural subsidies and public-private partnerships, both of which have
been pointed to as among questions that have held up progress on the
Johannesburg texts.
Mabhongo of South Africa lingered over such points of contention, stressing
inequalities stemming from globalization and "unsustainable patterns of
consumption and production" in rich countries. He called for resources as
the key to success in Johannesburg and urged the developed world to reduce
agricultural subsidies and open markets. Viotti, the Brazilian U.N. Mission
official, blasted the "protectionist measures" she said some industrialized
countries have taken since the Doha talks, saying Johannesburg represents a
chance for such countries to "re-establish confidence" in the WTO process.
Asked about U.S. agricultural subsidies, U.S. Undersecretary of State Larson
said only that the next round of trade talks is "the appropriate place in
which those areas will be addressed." Laying out the Bush administration's
Johannesburg agenda at a Washington speech in May, U.S. Undersecretary of
State for Global Affairs Paula Dobriansky stressed the importance of
partnerships in achieving development goals. Yesterday, Connaughton
defended the approach, saying partnerships should be used to "leverage"
government spending and that there is "nothing suspicious" about the
controversial idea. Non-U.S. participants tepidly endorsed the idea
yesterday, defending the prerogatives of government. Desai said
partnerships are important, but added that "the partnerships cannot be at
the expense of commitments by governments of what they need to do." Viotti
said partnerships "should complement whatever framework for action
governments agree on" and "should be seen as a complement to" and "not a
replacement of" government action.
39. CALL FOR ACCESS TO ECO NEWS
Gulf News
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.gulf-news.com/Articles/news.asp?ArticleID=58917
A two-day forum which concluded yesterday called for media freedom and easy
access to information for journalists in Arab countries on sustainable
development. The delegates, including 60 Arab journalists from abroad, were
attending the First Media Forum on Environment and Sustainable Development
in the Arab Region. They said there is a greater need for more media freedom
and easy access for journalists to any information that may help them
reflect a real public opinion on the issue of sustainable development. The
forum, held under the patronage of Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed Al Nahyan,
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs and Deputy Chairman of the
Environmental Research and Wildlife Development Agency (ERWDA), discussed a
number of work papers in order to come out with an approach that may reflect
the perspective of the Arab media on the issue at the World Summit for
Sustainable Development. The summit is will be held in Johannesburg, South
Africa, from August 26 to September 4. The forum was jointly organised by
UNDP, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), UAE Ministry of
Information and Culture, Council of Arab Ministers for Environment, ERWDA
and the Federal Environmental Agency (FEA). The forum also discussed the
Arab declarations on environment and sustainable development and the
regional media role in highlighting these efforts and initiatives.
The forum elected a permanent Arab Consultative Media Committee from among
the members of the UNEP, ERWDA and the Arab Journalists Union to present and
highlight the Arab environmental and development issues and initiatives not
only at the summit but in future too. It called for the establishment of an
Arab Media Monitoring Mechanism to follow up and document the environment
and sustainable development issues. This committee will look into the
economic, social, environmental and political aspects of sustainable
development. They want it to stress on the human being as a target for
development. "All media institutions in the Arab world have to inform the
public of issues discussed at the Johannesburg World Summit," the
participants recommended. Journalists were also urged to inform the general
public to what extent such issues affect notions of development and land use
in the Arab world. The delegates called upon the Arab governments to provide
space for freedom for the public to express their views on environmental
issues and exploitation of the environment. They also urged regional
governments to employ information technology for the purpose of
environmental awareness. The participants said that all Arab governments and
organisations concerned must provide assistance to local journalists in
order to follow up the summit sessions and keep the public informed.
They said: "Arab governments have to give freedom to journalists to allow
them to analyse information and have access to any information that may help
them in reflecting a real public opinion on the issue of sustainable
development." They also asked the governments and media institutions to
provide training courses to young journalists on environmental journalism to
prepare a generation of media people capable of handling issues of
sustainable development. Referring to higher educational institutions, the
participants advised that they have to integrate environmental education in
their curriculum to improve environmental awareness among the future
generations. They advised: "Governments and national institutions must
initiate environmental databases that can be updated and made accessible to
all decision-makers to help them lay down suitable environmental policies."
They also called for an immediate joint Arab media meeting after the
Johannesburg Summit to evaluate the performance of the Arab media during the
summit. They urged the Arab media to coordinate with the international media
in reflecting the Arab point of view on issues of desertification, water
shortage, pollution and other related issues during the summit.Meanwhile,
the UNDP, the main organiser of the forum, yesterday announced the name of
a new UN Goodwill Ambassador at the forum. He is George Kardahe from
Lebanon, a famous MBC quiz show presenter who conducts the Arabic version of
Who Wants to be a Millionaire?
40. SWEDEN DONATES R10 MILLION TOWARDS WSSD
SABC News
25 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,39357,00.html
More funding for the event. The Swedish government has thrown its weight
behind the success of the upcoming United Nations World Summit on
Sustainable (WSSD) 2002 taking place in Johannesburg from 26 August to
September 4. Speaking at an official signing ceremony held today at the
Johannesburg World Summit Company (Jowsco), Helena Nilsson, Sweden's
ambassador to South Africa, said: "It is only natural for Sweden to assist
South Africa financially in its ambitious and highly commendable undertaking
to host the World Summit on Sustainable Development. This should be set out
in an action plan future generations can pick up on. I am excited about
being part of this crucial summit." The Swedish government has contributed
R10 million towards Jowsco's summit preparations, in particular general
logistics. Sweden has a long-standing interest and engagement in global
sustainable development and environmental issues, which manifested in the
hosting of the first UN World Summit on Human Environment in Stockholm in
1972. At the WSSD, Sweden will seek to promote a global alliance aimed at
establishing a more equitable future based on renewed confidence between
north and south and rich and poor. "The keynote theme of the conference will
be sustainable development in its three dimensions: social, economic, and
environment. The poor, who have most difficulty in replacing one source of
income for another, are the hardest hit by the damage made to our
environment. The international community's goals with regard to sustainable
development must acquire a concrete form in Johannesburg next month," added
Nilsson. The Development Co-operation signed between South Africa and
Sweden - amounting to approximately R200 million annually - focuses on
education, democratic governance, urban development, economic co-operation,
culture and research. Moss Mashishi, the CEO of Jowsco, said that the
company appreciated the tireless commitment demonstrated by Sweden to South
Africa and sustainable development at large. "They have been a fundamental
aspect of South Africa's development and transition and have displayed
utmost support and dedication towards nature and the environment."
41. NOT ENOUGH PUBLICITY ABOUT JO'BURG WORLD SUMMIT
SABC News
25 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,39356,00.html
The latest SABC/Markinor Opinion 2002 poll shows that only 15% of all South
Africans are aware that the country is hosting the World Summit on
Sustainable Development (WSSD). The summit - which is being held to find
ways of tacking world poverty while protecting the global environment from
the damaging side-effects of development -- is considered one of the most
important international events for the last ten years. Over 100 heads of
state and international 45 000 delegates are expected at the summit.
The SABC/Markinor Opinion 2002 survey was done nationally in April and May
this year. In this study, 3 500 respondents polled. The results are
representative of the adult South African population. As can be expected,
awareness about the summit was the highest in Gauteng -- with a quarter
(24%) of adult residents in the province being aware of the WSSD. In fact, a
third of all South Africans who are aware of the WSSD, live in Gauteng.
Nearly seven in every ten of those aware of the WSSD say not enough
information about the summit has been made available to the public. There is
a correlation between awareness of the WSSD and education - six out of every
ten (61%) who are aware of the WSSD have matric or grade 12 or a tertiary
qualification. While most of those polled believe South Africa is capable of
hosting the biggest international summit held in ten years, 28% see it as a
waste of money and do not believe the gathering will find real solutions to
world problems. The large majority of those South Africans aware of the WSSD
feel proud that the country is hosting such a big event. The number of large
events hosted in South Africa recently has definitely contributed to the
view that the country has the necessary infrastructure and skills.
42. UNDP BACKS CALLS FOR REFORM OF GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS
SABC News
25 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/other/0,1009,39316,00.html
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has thrown its weight behind
calls for the reform of international financial and development
institutions. The Human Development Report, commissioned by the UNDP, calls
for concrete reforms to increase the role of developing countries in
international institutions and make them more open and accountable to the
people and countries whose lives they affect. The report was released
yesterday. South Africa has been using its position as chair of the Group of
77 developing nations and as one of the driving forces behind the New
Partnership for African Development (Nepad) to push for the reform of the
international trading and world governance systems. It is also hoping that
the World Summit for Sustainable Development (WSSD) will adopt a programme
of action that will open the markets of wealthy countries to goods and
services from the developing world - and increase international spending on
development aid.
Rich countries make the decisions
The report points out that nearly half of the voting power in the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund (IMF) rests in the hands of seven wealthy
countries. And, although all countries have a seat and a vote in the World
Trade Organization (WTO) in practice, decisions are taken in small group
meetings and heavily influenced by Canada, the European Union, Japan and the
United States. In 2000, 15 African countries did not have a single trade
representative stationed at the WTO. South Africa has been trying to assist
other African countries - as well as Caribbean and Pacific states - in their
trade and development negotiations with the EU and the US. The report
highlights a number of reforms that could address some of the more obvious
imbalances in global decision-making. These include: eliminating the UN
Security Council veto, reforming the selection process for the heads of the
IMF and World Bank and new programmes to help the poorest countries better
represent their interests at the WTO.
Fair chance to be heard
"People need to believe their elected representatives will have a fair
chance to represent their interests on decisions or policies that impact on
their lives and the wellbeing of their families," said Sakiko Fukuda-Parr,
chief author of HDR 2002.
The report says that recent global civil society campaigns -- on everything
from reducing poor country debt to accessing essential medicines under
intellectual property agreements - have pointed at ways to reach more
collaborative solutions to global problems in an interdependent world. More
than 1,000 civil society organizations across the world worked together in a
campaign to establish an International Criminal Court (ICC). Rather than
feeling threatened by such global activism, the international community
should see it as an opportunity to inject new energy and popular legitimacy
into global decision-making, the report argues.
More to democracy than activism
"Global civil society movements have been behind some of the most
significant global policy shifts of the last decade," Fukuda-Parr stated.
"But civic activism is not a substitute for democratic principles in formal
decision making structures. Just as consulting with a few non-governmental
organisations is not a substitute for a parliamentary debate at the national
level, democratic principles require that all countries get a hearing in
global institutions and decisions." Ironically, South Africa is keeping a
wary eye on civil society ahead of the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD). African civil society has been among the most vocal
critics of Nepad - which South Africa would like the summit to adopt as the
development programme for the continent. They have insisted that they have
not been consulted enough on the drawing up of the development programme.
And, there is some concern that some elements of the international civil
society movement will try and disrupt the summit with a protest against
globalisation and the international financial institutions. As the host
country, South Africa is determined that the summit will run smoothly.
The Human Development Index (HDI) 2002 ranks 173 countries by a composite
measure of life expectancy, education and income.
Sub-Saharan Africa rates the lowest
The picture with regard to poverty is bleak in sub-Saharan Africa. As many
as 23 of the region's 45 countries are failing on more than half the
targets, and another 11 - such as Angola and Somalia - do not even have the
relevant data. The bottom 24 countries on the Index are all in sub-Saharan
Africa. South Africa is number 107 on the index. A drop in life expectancy,
due to Aids, is holding South Africa's development index back. Norway is at
the top of the HDI.
43. ENVIRONMENT DOCUMENT PUBLISHED AHEAD OF SUMMIT
RTE Interactive
25 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.rte.ie/news/2002/0725/waste.html
The Minister for the Environment, Martin Cullen, has said the big challenge
for Ireland and the world is to ensure that policies on sustainable
development are implemented rather than discussed. He was speaking at the
publication of the Government's policy document for the upcoming World
Summit, which takes place in South Africa next month. The melting of ice
caps is just one indicator that the earth's temperature is rising and that
greenhouse gases are contributing to a dramatic change. The Earth Summit in
Rio ten years ago was supposed to herald a new dawn in which protection of
the environment was of equal importance to economic development. With a
follow-up to Rio taking place in Johannesburg, South Africa next month, the
Government published its policy paper claiming significant progress in 10
years but arguing we now need to implement. Many environmentalists attended
today's event. They point to the fact that Ireland's record on reducing
greenhouse gasses has been terrible. We are currently 100% over the intended
target. The environmentalists' policy platform will be published on 22
August. Meanwhile, Mr Cullen has dismissed reports that money raised by the
plastic bag levy will go into the road-building programme. Martin Cullen
said the levy would raise about 2 million this year, but said legislation
prevented it going anywhere other than the environment fund. He said
suggestions that it would be spent on roads were laughable. The bag tax was
introduced earlier this year and has been highly successful. Environmental
groups claimed it was a late but welcome move.
44. CIVIL SOCIETY GEARS UP FOR WORLD SUMMIT
Mail & Guardian
25 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.jsp?a=67&o=6233
South Africans will constitute about 10 000 of the 65 000 delegates who will
descend on Johannesburg for the World Summit on Sustainable Development next
month. As South Africa is the host country local NGOs may each send three
delegates to the civil society component of the summit. Next week the
recognised sectors of South African civil society will meet to discuss the
policy positions they will take to the summit. Desmond Lesejane, the CEO of
the South African Civil Society Secretariat, says there is unlikely to be
any agreement in South African civil society on political policy positions,
especially on the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad). He says
large components of civil society fear that Nepad's economic framework
imposes a neo-liberal agenda and a dependence on foreign investment for
success. Debt cancellation will also be one of the big issues.
In addition, Lesejane is concerned that the South African government does
not have a proper programme for sustainable development, a requirement that
came out of the Rio Earth Summit in 1992. Many African civil society groups
feel that South Africa did not address issues of poverty and development
enough during the preparatory talks for the summit in Bali a month ago; in
particular the voluntary partnerships touted between governments, the
private sector and the civil society. Non-governmental groups had hoped some
form of commitment to these issues would come out of the Bali talks. "We
have to have more than voluntary partnerships. Much unhappiness was
expressed at Bali at the concept of voluntary partnerships. Civil society is
saying we need clear mechanisms in place to ensure the implementation of
halving poverty by 2015," Lesejane says. "My concern is that we have to get
compliance and implementation from the government at the summit. Voluntary
partnerships are not enough. This will be the big challenge at the summit
for us." The South African government has not yet listened carefully to the
voices of civil society, he says. "They are quick to listen to business; it
takes them longer to hear our voices." But Lesejane also blames civil
society for the problem. "We don't know how to lobby and network properly.
We tend to talk to each other on public platforms ... Here we have a
situation where all views must be accommodated. Ideologically, to expect a
monolithic bloc is unrealistic."
45. OPTIMISTIC MOOD AT INFORMAL WSSD PREP MEETING, BUT LITTLE PROGRESS ON
SUBSTANCE
Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest Volume 6 Number 28
24 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.ictsd.org/weekly/02-07-24/story3.htm
Gathering for the first high-level meeting since the fourth preparatory
session (PrepCom IV) for the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD,
26 August - 4 September, Johannesburg, South Africa), delegates met in New
York on 17 July to discuss some of the key outstanding issues in the draft
Plan of Implementation (see BRIDGES Weekly, 12 June 2002). While the mood of
the meeting was generally described as "optimistic", little concrete
progress was made, with countries largely reiterating their previously-
stated positions. At the initiative of South Africa and chaired by Foreign
Minister N. Dlamini Zuma, 25 countries were invited to attend the 'Friends
of the Chair' meeting in New York. The participants were selected based on
geographical representation and common interest in the outstanding issues.
Many other delegations also attended, following concerns by some regarding
the choice of countries. The meeting focused on six major clusters,
including time-bound targets, the Rio Principles (in particular those
related to common but differentiated responsibilities and precaution),
finance, globalisation and trade, good governance and technology transfer.
South Africa furthermore identified market access for developing countries
and agricultural subsidies as key outstanding issues. The meeting was meant
to provide a platform for exchange of views, rather than negotiations, as
not all delegations were present. Overall, the meeting was described as a
positive step towards reaching agreement on some of the major stumbling
blocks. Substantively, however, countries generally restated their positions
already expressed in Bali, leading some to suggest that much work still
remained. One source also noted that the supposed progress was rather
"deceptive", with delegations largely restricting themselves to making
general comments, and that any possible value of the New York meeting was
political rather than substantive. Subject to a decision by South Africa,
countries tentatively agreed to continue the consultative process, including
designation of facilitators for the six issues areas and conducting further
consultation in the "Vienna setting" [i.e. only one person speaks on behalf
of each interest and/or regional group]. Informal negotiations similar to
those in Bali are expected to be held immediately prior to the Summit. South
Africa furthermore urged Ministers to be present in Johannesburg from 26
August to help finalise the negotiations. In deviation from usual practice,
South Africa is reportedly trying to involve Ministers in the actual
negotiations of the political declaration rather than leaving discussions to
the negotiators. In related news, EU ministers meeting on 20 July to discuss
their approach to WSSD stressed the importance of a successful Summit for
the global trade talks launched in Doha last year. "If Johannesburg fails,
we will probably see very negative effect in the global trade arena," warned
EU Development Commissioner Poul Nielson. "Doha would have a very difficult
start indeed if this were the background," he added.
46. PM PLANS TO ATTEND S. AFRICA SUMMIT
Globe & Mail
24 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/GIS.Servlets.HTMLTemplate?current_row=3&tf=tgam/common/FullStory.html&cf=tgam/common/Full
Story.cfg&date=20020724&cache_key=international&start_row=3&num_rows=1
OTTAWA -- Prime Minister Jean Chrétien is now expected to attend an
international environmental summit in Johannesburg that many feared was
turning into a dud because Western leaders had not signed up to attend.
Sources said yesterday that Mr. Chrétien expects to be at the World Summit
on Sustainable Development in early September -- which will mean time away
from an internal Liberal war in which Mr. Chrétien is fighting to keep his
job. Mr. Chrétien's planned attendance was dismissed by some observers as
little more than an attempt to improve his image on environmental issues.
But others said it will provide another chance for Canada to push its
oft-rejected bid to have the Kyoto accord include credits for clean energy
exports. Mr. Chretien's summit trip could also fit into his political
strategy of developing a fall policy agenda that would highlight his work as
prime minister while he faces an unofficial leadership contest with former
finance minister Paul Martin and a leadership review vote next February. Mr.
Chrétien has said that the environment, notably Canada's decision on
ratifying the Kyoto agreement on greenhouse gas emissions, will be a big
part of that agenda. Until recently, the Johannesburg summit appeared to be
lacking the high-level participation from Western countries that gives added
profile to such events -- and had nothing like the top-level attendance of
the landmark 1992 Rio summit. Only last week South African President Thabo
Mbeki engaged in an arm-twisting session with representatives of 27
countries, including Canada, pushing for more leaders to attend.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair had been the only leader of a G8 country
to commit early, and U.S. President George W. Bush is still not going. But
now Mr. Chrétien plans to attend, and a UN spokesman said French President
Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder are also now expected
to go. However, the summit is already viewed by some environmentalists as a
disappointment in the making, with no new environmental limits or major
initiatives to be dealt with. "I'm not really sure what they are going to
accomplish there," said the Sierra Club's Angela Rickman. She suggested Mr.
Chrétien might be more concerned with propping up his environmental legacy.
"I think he's really sort of stinging about people comparing him
unfavourably to Brian Mulroney [on the environment]." But John Kirton, a
University of Toronto expert on international summits, said he believes the
Prime Minister is hoping to use his appearance at the summit to lobby for
support from developing countries for the credits for clean energy exports
that Canada wants added to the Kyoto accord. "I suspect it's related to his
decision to ratify the Kyoto accord with an asterisk for clean energy," Mr.
Kirton said. Canada has so far met with vehement European resistance to the
credits, and an environmental summit in South Africa may be a good place to
lobby Asian and African countries to support the idea. He might also garner
goodwill if his decision to attend helps build momentum that pushes others
to agree to go, he said. Mr. Kirton said the developing countries would like
to see Canada included in Kyoto, and they may help push European countries
for concessions that would allow Canada to sign. But environmentalists such
as Matthew Bramley of the Pembina Institute say that is unlikely, and Kyoto
will probably go ahead without Canada.
47. BUSH TO SKIP EARTH SUMMIT
Yomiuri Shimbun
24 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20020724wo41.htm
U.S. President George W. Bush has decided not to attend the upcoming U.N.
World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg because of his tight
schedule, White House officials said Monday. Observers said the absence of
the U.S. president was likely to seriously affect the course of the U.N.
summit, the largest of its kind in history. Washington has not yet decided
who to send in Bush's place, but U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell and
Assistant Secretary of State John Turner were the most likely candidates,
according to sources close to White House. The summit, to be held from Aug.
26 to Sept. 4 in Johannesburg, is a follow-up to the 1992 Earth Summit in
Rio de Janeiro. About 170 countries are expected to participate in the
Johannesburg summit. So far, leaders from 45 countries, including British
Prime Minister Tony Blair and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, have
decided to attend the international gathering. Leaders from around the
world will discuss what progress has been made in the last decade on Agenda
21, the global plan of action for sustainable development that was adopted
at the Rio summit. They will also discuss ways to solve problems concerning
environmental protection and developing countries. Former U.S. President
George Bush took part in the summit 10 years ago.
48. WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: COMMISSION PUSHES FOR TANGIBLE
RESULTS AND GLOBALISATION FOR THE BENEFIT OF ALL
European Commission
24 July 2002
Internet:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/start/cgi/guesten.ksh?p_action.gettxt=gt&doc=IP/02/1133|0|RAPID&lg=EN&display=
European Commission President Romano Prodi today urged world leaders to
attend the upcoming World Summit in Johannesburg and take decisions on
global action for global sustainable development. "It is time to move from
words to deeds. This requires leadership and commitment. The EU is
determined to face its responsibilities and play a leading role in securing
tangible results in Johannesburg. Poverty and environmental degradation are
global problems requiring global solutions. Ten years after the Rio
Conference, action is overdue. With the Millennium Declaration, the Doha
development agenda and the Monterrey Consensus we have taken important steps
forward in securing international commitment. We have agreed to improve
market access and increase development aid. In Johannesburg developed and
developing countries must work hand-in-hand to make globalisation work for
everyone by agreeing on objectives and partnerships to make development
sustainable and reverse environmental degredation. We will take important
initiatives in the areas of water and energy. I call on others to follow our
lead." President Prodi will attend the Summit in Johannesburg, which will
last from 26 August to 4 September. The European Commission will also be
represented by Environment Commissioner Margot Wallström and Development and
Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Poul Nielson.
The summit marks the 10th anniversary of the Earth Summit in Rio
de Janeiro. It comes after several recent landmark events the UN's
Millennium Declaration which set ambitious goals on poverty eradication and
environment protection; the Doha Development Agenda, launched at a World
Trade Organisation Ministerial Meeting in November 2001; and the UN
Conference in Monterrey on financing for development in March 2002.
Commissioner Margot Wallström underlined the need to move the sustainable
development agenda forward through concrete action: "The Earth Summit in Rio
in 1992 was a landmark for sustainable development. The task before world
leaders in Johannesburg is not just to reaffirm their political commitment
to sustainable development but also to practice what they preach. We need to
map out a development path for the world that simultaneously tackles poverty
and the unsustainable use of our natural resources " Commissioner Poul
Nielson urged developed countries to reaffirm and honour the commitments
agreed both in Doha and Monterrey. "Over the past year, we have agreed a
framework for increasing aid and market access. The developed countries must
now deliver on these commitments. The EU, as the world's leading trade and
aid partner for developing countries, is fully determined to deliver on its
commitments. Any hint of appearance on backtracking on announcements made in
Doha and Monterrey would create a very poor negotiating climate for
Johannesburg".
Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy added: 'In Johannesburg, we must focus on how
best to achieve the goal of sustainable development. Launching the WTO Doha
Development Agenda was a step on the road. We must make every effort to take
further important steps in Johannesburg"
49. INFORMAL MINISTERIAL MEETING (ENVIRONMENT): THE ENVIRONMENT IS TO HAVE A
KEY POSITION AT THE WORLD SUMMIT
Danish Presidency of the EU
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.eu2002.dk/news/news_read.asp?iInformationID=21148
The environment is to have a key position at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development. This was the unambiguous position at the informal meeting of
Ministers for the Environment in Sønderborg, ending on 21 July. ""I have
had three days' discussions about sustainable development with my
ministerial colleagues from the EU Member States and the candidate
countries. What they have said has definitely given me reason for optimism.
There is a really good atmosphere and a very clear understanding that we
shall have to work hard to achieve good results for the environment at the
Johannesburg Summit. It must be absolutely clear, both in the communication
concerning Johannesburg, and in the very declaration from the Summit that
the environment plays a crucial role regarding sustainable development"
states Minister for the Environment Hans Christian Schmidt after the
meeting. During Saturday's working session on the process up to and during
the World Summit for Sustainable Development, the Environment Ministers
expressed the view that Europe is to assume global leadership in
Johannesburg in order to gain support for a global deal on how the
developing countries' needs for better living conditions may be taken into
account, while at the same time ensuring that the environment is considered
to the greatest extent possible. The global deal is to be based on Agenda
21 and the principles for "common, but differentiated responsibility",
"public participation" and the "precautionary principle" from the 1992 Rio
Summit together with the pledges of free trade and access to markets that
were made in Doha last year and the pledges of increased development
assistance that were made in Monterrey earlier this year. The Ministers are
agreed that the Summit should result in a clear, political declaration.
Similarly, a specific plan of action containing clear targets and time
schedules for a number of special themes such as water, sanitation and
energy should be adopted. One of the special themes ought to be a ten-year
work programme for sustainable production and consumption. "Europe's
Environment Ministers attach great importance to these matters. We shall
work hard to achieve success at the Johannesburg Summit. There is a real
possibility that success in Johannesburg may lead to considerable progress
for the environment. Even though we cannot take anything for granted as yet,
the Danish EU Presidency is of the opinion that there is reason to believe
that we shall be able to conclude a global deal at the World Summit. At any
rate, it is a fact that at the meeting here in Sønderborg, the Ministers for
the Environment have demonstrated that a European commitment to achieving
success is definitely present", said Minister for the Environment Hans
Christian Schmidt at Saturday's press conference in Sønderborg. During
Sunday's working session, the Environment Ministers discussed in particular
the EU internal dimension: the action for sustainable development in the
EU's own policies. The EU has taken great steps forward in terms of
sustainable development, but much remains to be done. Particularly with
regard to areas such as climate change, biodiversity and chemicals, the
Ministers for the Environment are agreed that the EU must make an effort
with a view to making further progress. "The internal dimension is the
dimension that ensures cohesion. The dimension that ensures that what the EU
says is consistent with what the EU does. This is the dimension that is to
lend greater importance to what the EU says about sustainability", said
Minister for the Environment Hans Christian Schmidt. The Environment
Ministers were agreed, among other things, that resource effectiveness in
Europe is to be increased, that environmental consideration is to be
integrated in sector policies in a cost-effective manner, for instance by
using financial control instruments more consistently, that the
EU is to measure whether action taken is moving in the right direction and
that the EU is to become better at using technological developments.
"Sunday's consultations reaffirmed that the EU has a huge potential. The EU
may become a region taking the lead in terms of decoupling economic growth
from increased environmental impact. This potential implies perspectives
that are altogether decisive in a period of time when the world is
discussing sustainability so intensely as is the case right now", said
Minister for the Environment Hans Christian Schmidt.
50. THE EQUATOR INITIATIVE ANNOUNCES 27 FINALISTS FOR CASH PRIZES WORTH
$180,000
United Nations Development Programme
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.undp.org/dpa/pressrelease/releases/2002/july/23jul02.html
New York, 23 July 2002:
The Equator Initiative has selected 27 extraordinary community projects as
finalists for the Equator Prize 2002,
which will be awarded on 30 August 2002 at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg. The finalists (Box 2) are drawn from a
pool of 420 nominations from 77 countries. An eminent Jury (Box 1) of
respected international leaders, including Noble Peace Prize laureates
Rigoberta Menchu Tum and former Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, will
select six winners, who will be presented with a cash prize of US$30,000,
each. "The challenge for global biodiversity conservation is how to move
from international commitment to local action," says Professor Calestous
Juma of Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and an
Equator Prize Jury member. "The projects shortlisted for the
Equator Prize 2002 are extremely
important because they demonstrate the incredible creativity of
community-level solutions to the challenges of biodiversity loss and
poverty." "The Equator Initiative
addresses a critical gap by highlighting successes, promoting innovative
partnerships, and stimulating "community to community" exchange across the
Equator Belt," said Mark Malloch Brown, Administrator of United Nations
Development Programme, and, with Senator Timothy Wirth of the UN Foundation,
co-creator of the programme. "Fortunately, creative and effective approaches
to halt poverty and protect biodiversity are being pioneered by courageous
people throughout the tropics. Yet awareness of these solutions and
understanding why they work remains limited." Representatives of each of
the 27 communities have been invited to the World Summit and participate in
the "Community Kraal" at the Ubuntu Village, hosted by the
Equator Initiative and other
partners. The "Community Kraal" will be a venue for learning and dialogue
between communities. Successful experiences that can be applied globally
will be disseminated broadly, including on the BBC's Hands On Series, which
will showcase all of the Equator Initiative nominees participating at the
Johannesburg World Summit.
About the Equator Initiative
The Equator Initiative
(www.equatorinitiative.org),
launched on 30 January 2002, focuses on the region between 23.5 degrees
north and south of the Equator, an area that contains both the world's
greatest concentrations of human poverty and biological wealth. The
initiative promotes a worldwide movement to reduce poverty and conserve
biodiversity by recognizing local achievements, fostering sharing between
developing countries, and supporting policy strengthening. Seven partner
organizations have joined with the United Nations Development Programme to
form the Equator Initiative
and recognize the outstanding work of local people - BrasilConnects,
Government of Canada, International Development Research Centre, IUCN - The
World Conservation Union, The Nature Conservancy, Television Trust for the
Environment, and the United Nations Foundation.
About the Equator Prize 2002
The Equator Prize 2002
recognizes outstanding projects in developing countries that address the
range of environmental and human challenges. The communities considered are
using local knowledge to combat poverty and environmental degradation in
ways that cut across the World Summit on Sustainable Development themes of
Water, Environment, Health, Agriculture, and Biodiversity. These projects
document the resilience and ingenuity of communities in the face of hardship
and show the success of collaborative approaches to biodiversity
conservation and poverty reduction.
51. YOUNG DELEGATES MEET FOR "MINI" EARTH SUMMIT
African Eye News Service
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020723280000027.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Mokopane, Jul 23, 2002 (African Eye News Service/All Africa Global Media via
COMTEX) -- Excited teens from across the globe have gathered in Limpopo
until July 31 to take part in the 9th Cathay Pacific International
Wilderness Experience.
This years event has been billed as the "mini earth summit' because the 42
participants, aged between 16 and 18, will be given the opportunity to
discuss issues being raised at the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD). "This years programme has gained significance because
it's being held before the WSSD," said Cathay Pacific spokeswoman Tracey
King.
"The youngsters will be able to voice their opinions and expectations of the
summit," she added. The event aims to instill an awareness and appreciation
of the environment and an understanding of how humans impact on the
ecological process.
The delegates represent 13 Asian countries and are accompanied by media
representatives from nine countries. The event is being held at Entabeni
Game Reserve in Naboomspruit near Mokopane. Internet publishing house
Wildnet Africa will report on the event via the net in conjunction with
Entabeni Game Reserve and Cathay Pacific Airways. For more information visit
http://www.MyEarthSummit.org/cathay2002.
52. LOOKING AHEAD TO JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT: IICA, ALONG WITH WORLD LEADERS,
CALLS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FD20020723120000062.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
WASHINGTON, Jul 23, 2002 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- The Inter-American
Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) participated in the
launching of the Monterrey Coalition in New York City on July 23. The
Coalition is an alliance of leaders in development created to ensure that
commitments made during the International Conference on Financing for
Development, held in Monterrey, Mexico, in March of this year, benefit the
rural poor, and to propose new and pragmatic solutions for the sustainable
development of agriculture. At the press briefing, Coalition spokespersons
called for the recognition of agriculture as an essential element of
sustainable development. IICA, the specialized agency for agriculture and
rural development of the Inter-American System, supports its 34 Member
States in their pursuit of sustainable development, food security and
prosperity in the rural communities of the Americas. IICA's Director of
Strategic Partnerships, Felipe Manteiga, stated that the Coalition is a
crucial step toward the success of the World Summit on Sustainable
Development (WSSD), to be held next month in Johannesburg, South Africa. "IICA's
participation in Johannesburg will focus on the importance of promoting
sustainable agricultural development, food security and prosperity in rural
communities," he said. IICA, he added, is in a unique position to connect
the rural community to global knowledge and trade through the use of
information and communications technologies. "We are proud to further the
objectives of the WSSD, in harmony with the rural development of our Member
States." At the press briefing, the spokespersons focused on the overall
objective of improving rural livelihoods, making it possible for the world's
poorest to meet the needs of their families and, at the same time, protect
the environment as part of the global sustainability cycle. According to
IICA's Director General, Dr. Chelston Brathwaite, "It is important to help
farmers and the agri-food industry compete in the global environment while
protecting our children's ecological heritage. Our Institute provides a
unique platform for implementing national and hemispheric projects intended
to increase rural development opportunities, eradicate poverty and hunger,
and preserve the environment."
53. TANZANIA TO EMPHASIZE BIOTECHNOLOGY AT WSSD
Xinhua News Agency
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020723340000058.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
DAR ES SALAAM, Jul 23, 2002 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- Tanzania would stress
environmental sound management of biotechnology during the forthcoming World
Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg next month, local
newspaper Guardian reported on Tuesday. The media quoted the national draft
report for WSSD as saying that the country should call for increased
awareness on opportunities and benefits of research on biotechnology for
increased food production and health.
The draft, being held ten years after the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de
Janeiro, emphasized that exploitation of biotechnological resources should
be taken with care because of the concerns on the impact of modern
biotechnological products.
On biological diversity, the draft pointed out that Tanzania has signed and
ratified nearly all international conventions on matters pertaining to
biodiversity from way back in 1951 to 1996 being one of the world's few
countries with high diversity of flora and fauna.
The draft also reported some species to be prone to extinction due to
uncontrolled exploitation and low awareness amid scanty information on
endangered as well as endemic species. The draft unveiled some of the
issues that Tanzania faced at present time, including insufficient
intuitional framework for coordination, limited government capacity for
environmental management, insufficient involvement etc. WSSD in
Johannesburg will bring together hundreds of political leaders and other
decision-makers to direct action towards meeting the difficult challenges of
improving peoples lives while conserving natural resources. The ten-day
summit, to be held from August 26 to September 4, will however, focus
primarily on the implementation of the commitments made in the 1992 Earth
Summit in Rio, according to the United Nations Development Programme which
has been supporting national activities leading to WSSD. All countries are
required to prepare a report on the implementation of the Earth Summit
agreements on the meeting. Tanzanian government currently is trying to
finish its final report to WSSD, and the draft is for seeking the opinion
from the public.
54. NITIN DESAI SAYS JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PREPARATIONS ARE DOING WELL
The Earth Times
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/nitindesaisaysjul23_02.htm
With 75 percent of the program for the upcoming Johannesburg Summit on
Sustainable Development agreed upon, Nitin Desai, the summit's Secretary
General, feels that one foot has already made its way through the door.
"Normally, we would always walk into the conferences with a lot of things
undecided," Desai said. The program areas and activities agreed upon
include issues involving the summit's main themes--water, energy, health,
agriculture and biodiversity. "The 25 percent that remains unresolved is
about broader and across the board matters of principles, finance,
globalisation, trade, governance and technology," he said. The disputes
over the unresolved issues extend to and continue over targets and
timetables. "What is debated is should there be a timetable, a fixed time
by which they would have to do this," Desai said. Desai feels that
establishing targets and timetables is vital for ensuring the success of the
summit. "What people are looking for is a degree of seriousness of
commitment. There has to be some kind of assurance; countries committing
themselves to doing certain things by a certain date," he said. Desai
emphasized that the Johannesburg summit will be about implementation and in
that case clear targets to focus attention on and timetables become very
useful tools for measuring whether we are getting there or not. "We must
convince the world that we are serious and that we are holding ourselves
responsible. We have to convince these people that we mean business and that
these great conferences can actually lead to results," Desai said. "How do
we do that? By saying that we will do this and that by such and such time."
Behind-the-scenes activities are underway. A group of 25 countries now
acting as "Friends of the Chair" between now and the Summit will discuss
some of the outstanding issues. The result of those discussions could be an
approach that might help expedite the negotiating process in Johannesburg.
Presidents and prime ministers from Germany, UK, Italy, France, Russia,
Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Canada, USA, Nigeria, Senegal, Egypt, Uganda,
Ghana, Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Mexico, Jamaica, China, India, Japan,
Indonesia and Jordan will name a senior person to speak for them. Desai
emphasized that this is not specifically a negotiating group. "The group
will not negotiate, but it will be able to exchange views, and suggest
approaches which might help us clear up these issues of targets and
timetables," he said. According to Desai, world leaders are showing keen
interest in the summit and the number of participants is rising to the
organizers' expectations. Nearly 85,000 delegates and other participants are
expected to attend the summit, August 26-September 4. "Do not ask me about
Washington. Other than that, we have good indications from everybody else.
We are getting there," Desai said. President George W. Bush has reportedly
declined the UN's invitation to attend Johannesburg; UN Secretary General
Kofi A. Annan is also said to have privately decided against attending.
Once in Johannesburg, summit-related activities will be taking place outside
the borders of the UN conference. "In addition to what governments are going
to talk about and negotiate, I expect to see a wide range of initiatives
launched by the corporate sector, NGOs and local authorities," Desai said.
"This is a summit that is aiming at bringing the community of stakeholders
together and in some sense try to take multilateralism to a new level."
55. APEC ENERGY MINISTERS AGREE TO WORK ON LONG-TERM ENERGY PLAN
Associated Press
23 July 2002
Internet:
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20020724/ap_wo_en_po/mexico_apec_energy_3
MEXICO CITY - Facing the possibility that demand could soon exceed supply,
top energy officials from 21 nations agreed Tuesday to work on a long-term
energy plan, including looking for new, cleaner production methods. In a
statement released at the end of their daylong meeting, members of the
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation ( news - web sites) Forum promised to work
together to ensure that their countries can produce enough energy to fuel
economic growth. The energy ministers met in Mexico City to discuss ways to
support responsible energy policies ahead of a U.N. World Summit on
Sustainable Development in Johannesburg later next month. Mexico Energy
Secretary Ernesto Martens said that ministers concurred that they would need
more investment and better government to meet future needs. "We agree that
these objectives require immediate, concrete actions," he said.
Calling the energy sector "vital for our economies," Mexican President
Vicente Fox ( news - web sites) said ministers should work on "new
directives to shape a long-term vision." "Meeting the needs of growing
energy demands is a principal goal that our economies face," he said. As
California struggled with energy shortages, U.S. President George W. Bush (
news - web sites) and Fox agreed last year to work toward a regional energy
plan that would include countries from Panama to Canada. On Tuesday, Fox
said regions should continue to cooperate to satisfy energy needs and share
technology. With the world's ninth-largest oil reserves, Mexico relies on
the energy sector to provide 40 percent of the government's income. Faced
with dwindling resources for new projects, Fox has called for allowing
greater private investment in the state-run oil company, Petroleos Mexicanos,
or Pemex. The proposal has met opposition in Congress, where many lawmakers
see the oil industry as a sacred government institution.
On Tuesday, Fox urged Mexico to find ways to modernize the country's energy
sector, saying it was key to "assure the economic progress and meet the
promise to ... improve the quality of life for Mexican families." Martens
also raised the possibility that Mexico could increase its oil reserves in
the near future, and called on the 21 APEC nations to work together in areas
like regulatory reform and energy savings. "All of these areas of
cooperation offer our economies important support," he said.
The APEC members range from Australia and China to Chile and Canada. Their
economies make up 60 percent of global gross domestic product - a measure of
all goods and services.
56. WILL KOFI ANNAN ATTEND THE UN'S WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT?
The Earth Times
22 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/willkofiannanjul22_02.htm
Secretary General Kofi A. Annan of the United Nations may have privately
decided not to attend the World Summit on Sustainable Development in
Johannesburg in late August, according to people familiar with the UN. They
said that part of Annan's reported thinking concerning Johannesburg had to
do with the decision of President George W. Bush not to go to Johannesburg.
But a spokesman for the Secretary General said Monday evening that, as far
as was known, Annan still planned to attend. Still, there were reports in
the corridors of the UN that Annan was less than satisfied with the
preparatory process leading to Johannesburg that he was inclined not to go.
The summit will mark the 10th anniversary of the 1992 Earth Summit- more
formally known as the UN Conference on Environment and Development--which
was held in Rio de Janeiro. But rather than be just a tedious review of the
progress--or lack thereof--since Rio, Annan identified the following issues
as priorities at Johannesburg: Water, energy, health, agriculture and
biodiversity. These issues, according to the Secretary General, will help
contribute to the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals that were
spelled out at the UN's summit of world leaders in September 2000. The
overarching objective of those goals was to dramatically alleviate global
poverty. (More than 2 billion of the world's current population of 6 billion
are officially termed "poor" by the World Bank, which means they earn the
equivalent of less than $1 a day.) A number of nongovernmental organizations
who had invested high hopes in Johannesburg said Monday that they were
concerned the draft document for the summit--scheduled to run from August 26
to September 4--was far from complete. "It's Rio Minus 10," said one
dissatisfied representative of a civil society organization. He said that
NGOs were also troubled by the pervasive role played by business groups. "At
times it appears that this will be a business summit, not a UN one," he
said. The reference was to the World Business Council for Sustainable
Development whose World Business Action Council--created in cooperation with
the International Chamber of Commerce--has been energetic in promoting the
interests of corporations. Several Web sites have been launched. And
business groups are planning to hold many seminars and exhibitions at
Johannesburg. There were also reports yesterday that President Thabo Mbeki
of South Africa was concerned about the lethargic preparations for the
Johannesburg Summit, which he views as a potential triumph for his country.
He has reportedly formed a working group to expedite arrangements for the
summit. If Secretary General Annan fails to turn up for the summit--which
is technically his own summit since it's sponsored by the UN--it would be
widely considered as a slap to Mbeki's face. And it would fuel talk that
Kofi Annan marches to George W. Bush's tune.
57. PREPARATIONS FOR JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT PROGRESS BUT DOCUMENT ISSUES NOT
FULLY CLARIFIED
The Earth Times
22 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/preparationsforjohannesburgjul22_02.htm
As preparations continue for the 2002 Johannesburg World Summit on
Sustainable Development to be held in late August, summit leaders continue
to tackle questions on how best to devise solution-oriented strategies for
the issues to be discussed at the Summit. The summit's Secretary-General,
Nitin Desai of India, said that six key areas that still remain unresolved.
He identified them as: How best to implement the principles adopted at the
Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992; how to subsidize solutions to
global problems to be discussed at the summit; how to handle matters
regarding trade and globalization; how to handle issues of good governance;
how best to devise targets and timetables for reaching the stated goals of
the summit, and how to incorporate technology into the discourse of
sustainable development. The United Nations Secretary General, Kofi A. Annan
of Ghana, has said that the overarching priorities of the Johannesburg
Summit would be: Water, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. "The
real test is whether we can convince the world that great world conferences
can make a difference on the ground," Desai said. The summit is scheduled
to formally start on August 26 summit and end of September 4.
Nongovernmental organizations will gather two days earlier--on August
24--for their own conferences in Johannesburg. Altogether, the Johannesburg
Summit is expected to attract more than 85,000 participants, with guests
ranging from world leaders, business executives, scientists, media persons
and representatives from international NGOs. Referring to recent world
conferences in Doha, Qatar, and Monterrey, Mexico, Desai emphasized the need
to "consolidate gains" from previous multilateral meetings. "Johannesburg
should not be seen as only the follow up for the implementation of the Earth
Summit -- it is also vital for the whole framework of multilateralism."
With most of the Johannesburg Summit's agenda having been decided, the six
remaining areas identified by Desai continue to serve as reminders to
international leaders of the difficult road ahead in realizing the goals of
the meeting. There is general agreement that the next few weeks will be
critical in determining whether consensus regarding the agenda can be
reached for summit participants to most effectively consider strategies for
achieving sustainable development.
58. ACP COUNTRIES TO PRESENT A COMMON POSITION AT WSSD
The Post via All Africa
22 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FD20020722480000025.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Jul 22, 2002 (The Post/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- THE African
Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of countries have decided to present a
common position at the forthcoming World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD).
It was resolved at the third ACP heads of state and government summit that
closed on Friday in Fiji Islands, that the ACP President-in-Office be
mandated to represent the ACP group at the WSSD to be held in Johannesburg,
South Africa from August 26 to September 4. The heads of state and
government have to this effect, instructed the secretary general to take
necessary steps in preparing for the WSSD by preparing a statement to be
presented by the president and to facilitate consultations among ACP
states. The WSSD is a follow-up on the Earth Summit of 1992 that hoped to
make environmental issues a central part of the policy-making process,
integrated with economic and social development. It was hoped then, that
the environment would no longer be regarded as a luxury or afterthought. The
leaders have also mandated the council of ministers to organise regular
consultations between ACP states and others or regional and international
organisations on issues of major interest to the group.
Other decisions from the summit include the conclusion of economic
partnership agreements (EPAs) with the European Union. Negotiations are
expected to be launched on September 27 this year. According to the
resolutions, the ACP has recognised the need to engage actively and
proactively in multilateral negotiations under the Doha work programme of
the World Trade Organisation and EPAs negotiations. The communique also
stated that the ACP was aware of the need to pursue policies conducive to
the expansion of ACP trade. It was not that intra-regional trade was
increasingly important for ACP states and that further consolidation and
deepening of existing sub-regional trade agreements would contribute to
increasing market access opportunities in demand-dynamic export markets.
The ACP leaders stated that they were convinced that regional trade
arrangements could be instrumental for diversification of exports which
would enable ACP states derive higher revenues from export of higher
domestic value-added products.
59. ON EVE OF JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT, INTERNATIONAL COALITION OF EXPERTS
CHALLENGES GLOBAL LEADERS TO DELIVER ON THE AGRICULTURE AND BIODIVERSITY
AGENDA -- AGAINST BACKDROP OF THE THREAT OF FAMINE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA,
PRACTICAL, REAL-WORLD SOLUTIONS TO FOOD PRODUCTION AND BIODIVERSITY
CONSERVATION UNVEILED
Future Harvest
22 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FF20020722660000035.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
NEW YORK, Jul 22, 2002 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- With less than thirty days
to go before global leaders convene in Johannesburg, South Africa for the
World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD), a new coalition of
organizations, the Monterrey Bridge, challenged countries to uphold promises
made earlier this year at the International Conference on Financing for
Development (FfD). Specifically, the coalition is calling for tangible
action to combat rural poverty. At a press conference in New York today, the
Monterrey Bridge also addressed the importance of bringing environmentally
sustainable food production to the table at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development and beyond. On behalf of the coalition, Judith Symonds,
Executive Director of the Future Harvest Foundation, issued the following
challenge: "We call upon participants at the WSSD to ensure that the goal of
feeding the world's poor is integrated with efforts to protect biodiversity.
There are numerous examples from around the world on how this can be done
effectively. There is no time to loose. World leaders must commit the
financial resources to expand upon these success stories and apply their
learnings globally." Symonds' call built upon the presentations of three
earlier speakers -- the Honorable Cassio Luiselli, the Undersecretary of
Environmental Regulation at the Mexican Ministry of the Environment and
Natural Resources, SEMARNAT and Yolanda Kakabadse, President of IUCN -- The
World Conservation Union and Jeffrey Sachs, Director of the Earth Institute
at Columbia University and Special Advisor to the Secretary General for the
Millennium Development Goals. After reminding attendees of the pledges
world leaders made earlier this year at the FfD conference in Monterrey,
Mexico, Luiselli discussed the need to increase agricultural production by
an estimated 40 to 100 percent in the next 20-30 years and described the
negative effects on local biodiversity of many agricultural policies and
practices currently in place will have. Kakabadse followed by discussing
the need for grassroots participation in efforts to protect biodiversity --
in ways that also contribute to food and livelihood security. She gave
examples of how local grassroots solutions have worked with great success in
diverse parts of the world. To celebrate these efforts, Kakabadse announced
the 27 finalists for the Equator Prizes 2002, to be awarded by the Equator
Initiative. A partnership of UNDP and BrasilConnects, Canada, IDRC, IUCN,
TNC, TVE and UNF -- these $30,000 prizes will be awarded at the WSSD and
will recognize six innovative rural communities that have reduced poverty
while preserving biodiversity. Sachs concluded the discussion by tying the
discussion back to the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals and
discussed the new WEHAB (water, energy, health, agriculture biodiversity and
sustainable ecosystem management) framework as a way to ensure they are met.
Sachs focused on the importance of the As and Bs (agriculture and
biodiversity) in the WEHAB equation and called on the private sector to
proactively get involved in the process at the WSSD and beyond.
The Monterrey Bridge coalition includes: Centro Mexicano para la Filantropia
(CEMEFI), Fundacion Mexicana para el Desarollo Rural (FMDR), the Equator
Initiative, Future Harvest, the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation of
Agriculture (IICA), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD),
IUCN - The World Conservation Union, Pronatura, and the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP).
60. SIGNS OF WORLD SUMMIT FAILING TO ACHIEVE A BREAKTHROUGH
Business Day
22 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FE20020722370000093.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
Johannesburg, Jul 22, 2002 (Business Day/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX)
-- Organisers expect fewer to attend
STRONG signals are emerging that the forthcoming Johannesburg World Summit
will fall well short of meeting SA's and the United Nation's (UN's) goals
for a broad breakthrough agreement. Rather than breaking new ground, the
final political declaration expected to emerge from the largest UN event is
expected to reaffirm existing initiatives. Trying to break new ground with
specific targets for development and environmental goals, with commitments
for new financing and trade liberalisation are out of the question in
Johannesburg. While all 193 UN members have been invited, the organisers
expect only 100 at the summit starting late next month. Environmental groups
close to the negotiations say only 70 heads of state can realistically be
expected.
Another sign of diminished international interest is that the Johannesburg
World Summit Company (Jowsco) has slashed the number of people they expect
in Johannesburg for the event by almost a third. Earlier this year it
expected 65000 people, now it says 45000 is likely. The level of
international interest could depend to a large extent on whether President
George Bush decides to attend. Hilary French, director of global governance
at the Worldwatch Institute, a Washington DC-based independent environmental
research group, says that "to not attend will send a terrible signal", about
lack of concern for environmental issues.
An urgent meeting last week, chaired by Foreign Minister Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma, reached no agreement. Although it was not billed as a
negotiating session, a press release issued afterwards said "convergence"
was achieved on contentious issues. But it gave no evidence that this was
the case. Indeed, the only real progress was what the top UN bureaucrat in
charge of the summit negotiations called, "a real change in attitude and
atmosphere", from the previous negotiating round. The previous round on the
Indonesian luxury resort of Bali showed no progress. Now the deal between
the 27 countries in New York last week seems to have been an agreement to
set sights considerably lower. Developing countries want firm financing and
trade liberalisations timetables and commitments to meet the UN's eight
Millennium Development Goals. The US, reluctant to make new commitments,
does not want to talk about trade and finance matters, saying that these
have been discussed elsewhere. And then there is no agreement on how two
basic principles should govern the talks. "Common but differentiated
responsibilities" was agreed on in the climate change convention in the late
1980s. But some developed countries, including the US, are worried that it
could be used to bind them to commitments. The "precautionary principle",
which was part of the Rio Declaration of the 1992 Earth Summit, is also
proving a quagmire as a strict interpretation would inhibit progress in
biotechnology. The US and a number of developing countries, including SA,
are resisting the strict European interpretation of this.
61. THE MILLENNIUM PROJECT RELEASES 2002 STATE OF THE FUTURE REPORT
Ascribe News
22 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FG20020722530000033.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
WASHINGTON, Jul 21, 2002 (ASCRIBE NEWS via COMTEX) -- The Millennium
Project, an international think tank comprising more than 1,000 futurists,
scholars, business leaders, scientists and policymakers from more than 50
countries, acting under the auspices of the American Council for the United
Nations University, today announced the release of its 2002 "State of the
Future" report. This annual report provides an assessment of the global
situation and future trends; normative, exploratory, and long-range
scenarios, and annotated bibliographies of hundreds of scenarios; as well as
special studies on future issues of science and technology, environmental
security, and an in-depth analysis of international policies and goals. The
report consists of a series of executive summaries in 90 pages accompanied
by a CD-ROM of approximately 2,000 pages with complete details of the
Millennium Project's cumulative work since 1996. The cost of the report is
$49.98. The Millennium Project's "State of the Future" report addresses the
international situation on 15 global challenges, with sensitivity to
regional perspectives, prospects for the future, policies and actions to
address them, as well as indicators to measure progress. These include:
sustainable development, water, population and resources, democratization,
global, long-term policymaking, the globalization of information technology,
the rich-poor gap, threats to health, decision making capacities, conflict
resolution, improving women's status, transnational crime, energy, science
and technology and global ethics. The Millennium Project also produces the
annual "State of the Future Index." This comprehensive index aims to measure
world progress on the 15 global challenges addressed in the "State of the
Future" report. Based on historical data of key indicators and analysis of
trends, it quantitatively forecasts whether the future promises to be better
or worse. The Millennium Project is overseen by an International Planning
Committee A planning committee of 37 members from 21 countries oversees the
Project's direction. The Project's administrative principals are director
Jerome C. Glenn, senior fellow Theodore J. Gordon, and director of research
Elizabeth Florescu. The Washington, DC, office of the Millennium Project
acts as its coordinating and publishing facility, "The AC/UNU's Millennium
Project on the State of the Future combines, as it should, flights of
imagination into the far future with tightly focused analyses of present
challenges," commented Michael W. Doyle, Assistant Secretary-General, United
Nations, about the report. "It is an indispensable volume for those who seek
both the inspiration and enlightenment needed to meet the challenges that
will make a productive future possible."
About the Millennium Project
The Millennium Project is a worldwide think tank comprising more than 1,000
futurists, scholars, business leaders, scientists and policymakers from more
than 50 countries, acting under the auspices of the American Council for the
United Nations University. The Millennium Project is dedicated to exploring
global futures by interviewing and surveying individuals at corporations,
universities, NGO's, UN organizations, and governments to understand world
change and to identify actions to reach the best possible future for
humanity as a whole. In addition to its flagship "State of the Future"
report, The Millennium Project also produces studies in other specialized
areas, including counter terrorism strategies, science and technology,
environmental security, United Nations Millennium Summit analysis, early
warning and decision making, long-range goals for governance, "African
Futures 2025" and "Future Research Methodology." The Millennium Project's
work has been recognized by leading organizations and has been named one of
the best foresight organizations by the US Department of Energy, is annually
selected among "Top Picks" by the Future Survey, and is recognized as one of
the leading "Best Practices" by United Nations Habitat.
For further information visit
www.StateOfTheFuture.org.
62. WORLD SUMMIT FAILURE COULD IMPERIL TRADE TALKS: EU
SABC News
20 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/summit/0,1009,39008,00.html
European Union (EU) ministers met today to plot a course for the
Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development, with a key official
saying failure at the summit could jeopardise global trade talks. The
gathering of European Union environment ministers in Soenderborg, Denmark,
was greeted by a small but loud demonstration of anti-EU and
anti-globalisation activists. Police detained several of the mostly young
protesters after minor scuffles. The EU wants the WSSD to issue a clear
action plan and timetables to provide access to water, sanitation and
electricity to developing nations and set aims for reducing environmental
harm. Poul Nielson, the EU Development Commissioner, said that if the rich
world failed to make such commitments and show how they would be met, poorer
nations would be unlikely to play ball in trade talks launched last year in
Doha, Qatar.
"If Johannesburg fails, we will probably see very negative effects in the
global trade arena," he told a news conference after the meeting of EU
environment ministers. "Doha would have a very difficult start indeed if
this were the background."
The trade talks launched at Doha last November aim to further open up world
trade and at the same time make sure that developing nations benefit by
getting greater access to markets, such as agriculture, in rich states. With
just six weeks to go before the start of the two-week Johannesburg
gathering, which marks the 10th anniversary of the Rio Earth Summit,
diplomats have made only modest progress on agreeing the political
declaration and action plan that should be issued at its conclusion.
EU takes aim at United States
EU diplomats said the United States was reluctant to accept the targets and
timetables it was suggesting, preferring instead to concentrate on voluntary
initiatives from industry to help the poor while protecting the environment.
Nielson said the United States withdrawal from the Kyoto treaty on global
warming and a farm bill which Washington produced last month to give bigger
subsidies for United States farmers were examples of where the world's
richest nation had irked the poorest.
"It isn't a simple question of just blaming the United States, but its whole
attitude to working with multilateral agreements makes it more difficult (to
get an agreement for Johannesburg)," Nielson said. Margot Wallstrom, the EU
Environment Commissioner, said the developed world had failed the poorer
countries since Rio, when it promised to work for sustainable development -
increasing prosperity for all without destroying the environment. "The
world is split 10 years after Rio into winners and losers," she said. "There
is mistrust and a lack of confidence of the developing countries towards us
and the United States in particular."
The environment ministers were spending the weekend in talks to define the
EU's negotiating position on the environmental aspects of the summit.
According to the EU's executive Commission, the bloc has five priorities:
drafting a 10-year plan for sustainable production and consumption;
reversing the decline in biological diversity; action to deal with hazardous
chemicals; delivering clean water and sanitation to the world's poor;
increasing the use of renewable energy. - Reuters
63. AUSTRALIAN MINISTERS TO ATTEND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT
Asia Pulse
19 July 2002
Internet:
http://library.northernlight.com/FB20020719850000118.html?cb=0&dx=1006&sc=0#doc
CANBERRA, Jul 19, 2002 (AsiaPulse via COMTEX) -- Australia is to send a
high-level ministerial group to Johannesburg for next month's World Summit
on Sustainable Development to help resolve climate and environment problems.
The Australian delegation is yet to be finalised but Environment Minister
David Kemp has indicated state ministers and non-government groups may
accompany him to South Africa. The summit, dubbed Rio+10 in recognition of
the 10-year anniversary of the UN-sponsored Rio Earth Summit, is expected to
nut out a political declaration, timetables and targets to improve the state
of the world's environment and people. Dr Kemp will lead the delegation to
the meeting, which is expected to comprise more than 180 countries and house
55,000 people. Sorting out long-standing disagreement on the Kyoto Protocol
is at the top of the UN list of issues demanding attention. The main
challenge for world leaders is to work out how countries can raise living
standards while also protecting the environment. Negotiations to date, most
recently in Bali, reached an impasse, with the UN now calling for countries
to bridge gaps ahead of the main meeting in Johannesburg. It has identified
sticking points as climate change woes and issues related to globalisation,
trade and the timing of targets. In a speech to yesterday's New York
meeting UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan issued a challenge to world leaders
to put words into action. "Johannesburg is a test for multilateralism and
for the international community," he said. "It is a test for all leaders
who profess to care about the well-being of our planet and its people.
"Johannesburg must send a message of solidarity and concern, and must
produce real change, on the ground in people's lives, where it matters
most." Progress since the Rio earth summit had been slower than expected
and slower than what was needed, he said. The Australian government has for
years faced international criticism for its bugbear with the Kyoto Protocol
on climate change and will face more scrutiny at the coming meeting. In a
fact sheet on the summit, Environment Australia said preparatory work was a
priority and had been underway for 18 months. Two departmental officers
were sent as observers to this week's special preparatory meeting at United
Nations headquarters in New York aimed at resolving world differences on the
environment. The Johannesburg meeting begins on August 26.
64. GET TO JO'BURG EARLY (AND BE READY TO DO SOME WORK)
Mail & Guardian
19 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.jsp?a=11&o=6668
South Africa on Tuesday asked delegations from the 189 UN member states
expected at next month's Earth Summit in Johannesburg to arrive two days
early to hammer out a deal on sustainable development. The government called
on delegates to arrive on August 24 "to expedite the negotiations",
according to a statement released by the United Nations. The UN World Summit
on Sustainable Development, or Earth Summit, is due to be held in
Johannesburg from August 26 to September 4. The conference, a follow-up to
the first Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, aims at coordinating
economic growth plans and environmental protection in order to guard against
global depletion of natural resources. About 65 000 people representing
governments, activist movements and non-governmental organisations are
expected to attend the summit, with the United Nations saying 58 heads of
state and 40 heads of government had expressed interest. French President
Jacques Chirac, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder have all announced plans to travel to Johannesburg, while
US President George Bush's attendance is in doubt. The United States and
European countries are still divided over the need to set fixed objectives
to reduce world poverty, although they have agreed to jointly block
developing countries' demands for an end to farm subsidies in rich Western
nations and for the creation of more aid packages. UN officials said that at
a preparatory meeting held in New York two weeks ago delegates from 27
selected nations bridged gaps on several issues, prompting calls for
additional pre-summit talks in Johannesburg.
65. CARING FOR NATURAL RESOURCES IS PRE-REQUISITES TO SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
Government of Botswana
18 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.gov.bw/cgi-bin/news.cgi?d=20020718&i=Caring_for_natural_resources_is_pre-requisites_to_sustainable_development
Teaching people new ways of caring for natural resources is one of the
pre-requisites to achieving sustainable development in the 21st century,
Felix Monggae, the chairperson of the Botswana Civil Society Committee, said
in Gaborone . Addressing a news conference, Monggae said the conservation
and management of natural resources should be put at the forefront of all
development initiatives to avoid the depletion of the earth. Monggae, who
is also the chief executive officer of the Kalahari Conservation Society,
said deforestation, pollution, hazardous wastes, solid wastes and sewage are
some of the factors that contribute to poverty. He said the strategies
applied in alleviating poverty could only be accomplished if resolutions of
the 1992 Rio Earth Summit on environmental issues are followed. He said it
is important to involve groups such as those of women, youth,
non-governmental organisations, trade unions, local authorities, business
communities, industries, scientists and farmers that objectives of poverty
alleviation could become a reality. Monggae's news conference was partly
called to present to the nation, the position of the country's civil
societies to be present at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), slated for Aug. 26 to Sept. 6 in Johannesburg . The press
conference was also to inform the nation about the societies' thoughts on
poverty alleviation. Monggae announced that Botswana's civil society has set
up a committee that will seek and come up with measures of alleviating
poverty without harming the natural resources. The WSSD would aim to come
up with solutions to problems that impede poverty alleviation. The summit
is held at a time when the world's environment is under threat and the
quality of life for people in developing countries is seen as a threat to
the long-term security of the developed world.
66. GERMAN MINISTER KEEPS HIS FAITH IN UPCOMING EARTH SUMMIT
DW - World
17 July 2002
Internet:
http://dw-world.de/english/0,3367,1446_A_593781_1_A,00.html
Will the much-awaited Earth Summit in Johannesburg yield results? German
environment minister Trittin is hopeful despite growing differences between
the EU, the US and the developing world. A decade after the landmark Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro first put environmental issues on the global
political agenda, the next UN World Summit on Sustainable Development
(WSSD), kicking off in Johannesburg on August 26, is expected to take things
a step further. The agenda will be stretched as a flurry of topics clamour
for attention, ranging from poverty, the environment and energy politics to
water economics, globalisation and sustainable development.
Hopes dim for Earth Summit
Despite the high hopes pinned on the summit, there's no denying that the
initial enthusiasm about tackling global environmental problems has waned as
sharp differences between the United States, the European Union and the
developing world have emerged.
So much so that there are now fears that the Johannesburg summit might
merely echo broad principles adopted by different countries rather than
bring about real change. German environment minister Jürgen Trittin, who is
at a meeting in New York today to prepare the ground for the Johannesburg
summit, said at a press conference that the summit can not be allowed to be
dominated by expressions of overall goals. He said binding environmental and
political aims as well as clear targets and timetables need to be agreed
upon. One of the key proposals by the German government and the EU is to
increase the use of renewable energies to generate electricity by 15 percent
by the year 2010. Another is to halve the number of people who have live
with poor sanitation and have no access to clean drinking water. The
proposals are mainly directed at rich industrial nations, which Trittin said
are believed to be mainly responsible for global climate change.
Opening markets
One potential sticking point is a call from developing countries for a
greater commitment by richer nations to open their markets to trade and the
transfer of technology. But last month at a meeting on the island of Bali, a
US administration official made it clear that the United States was not
prepared to go beyond commitments it had already made. Trittin admitted
that in this respect it wasn't just the United States holding firm. Some
Europeans are also reluctant to open their markets. "The main problem is the
huge subsidies that some industrial countries give some of their economic
sectors. OECD countries spend $335 million (331.9 million euro) a year for
agricultural subsidies alone, preventing several products from developing
countries getting access to the market", he said in an interview with the
Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper. In Europe, Trittin said, France, Ireland and
Spain were especially reluctant to give up their agricultural subsidy
systems.
Will the US get on board?
There is one big question on many minds: can the US and EU start reading off
the same page when it comes to the Earth's environmental future? So far the
US has shied away from any kind of binding commitment regarding
environmental protection and has incurred the wrath of several developing
and European countries who blame it for putting the brakes on
environmentally friendly policies on water and sanitation, energy,
agricultural productivity, bio-diversity and health. Trittin told the
Süddeutsche Zeitung, "the US as usual has problems with such multilateral
commitments". In a sign that the US may maintain its rigid stance, US
Commerce Undersecretary Grant Aldonas told Reuters on Tuesday that next
month's summit may not produce a concrete plan for sustainable development,
but still could be a successful breeding ground for new ideas. Trittin
sanguine despite differences
Despite the yawning gap between US and European viewpoints, Trittin says he
sees hope that a compromise might be reached with the Americans. "Once the
Europeans reach an agreement with the developing countries about access to
markets, it will be easier to spur the Americans to commit themselves to
concrete aims," he told the Süddeutsche Zeitung. After all the US wants to
be successful in Johannesburg too."
OPINIONS
67. WORLD SUMMIT ALL TALK, NO ACTION by Chi Chun-chien
Taipei Times
2 August 2002
Internet:
http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/2002/08/02/story/0000158684
Chi Chun-chieh is an associate professor at the Institute of Ethnic
Relations at National Dong-Hwa University.
This month, representatives from a majority of the world's nations and many
non-governmental organizations will gather in Johannesburg, South Africa,
for the World Summit on Sustainable Development. This is the first such
meeting to be held since the first world summit, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
in 1992, and it has therefore been dubbed "the second world summit" or "Rio
+ 10."
At the time of the first summit, most people were concerned about the
destruction of the global environment and filled with expectations for the
opportunities offered by this first joint global effort. Ten years on,
however, it seems the expectations of most people have come to nothing,
since most evidence shows that the global environment has continued to
deteriorate over the past 10 years. Over the past 20 years, there have been
many warnings in the media that issues such as deforestation, global
warming, environmental pollution and population growth in developing
countries are the major causes of the destruction of biohabitats and
biological extinction. These are all issues that we were very clear on long
before the Rio summit, but we appear to have become immune and numb to such
news. What's more, this kind of information has not only been unable to
point out the true causes behind these issues, but sometimes it even
misdirects our recognition of these issues. For example, pointing out how
lumber companies cause biohabitats to shrink by their continued
deforestation in parts of Eastern Europe and Africa without discussing what
the relationship is between these activities and the timber and paper we
use, and even the beef we eat, simply creates an impression that those
lumber companies are at it again, continuing their destruction. In this way,
our daily activities and consumption are never examined, and so we never
feel as though we need to make any adjustments to our daily lives.
The rapid population growth of developing countries is repeatedly reported
and distorted in the same way. First of all, the reasons why the population
in these areas continues to increase so rapidly has never been seriously
discussed in the media. Secondly, this kind of information has created the
erroneous impression that the large populations in developing countries are
the main cause of environmental destruction and biological extinction. Many
studies, however, have found that poverty is the main reason for rapid
population growth. At the same time, even though the population growth rates
in rich countries are low, their average lifestyles consume several dozen of
times more resources than do the lifestyles of populations in poorer areas.
Rich countries also create more of many kinds of waste, and therefore much
more destructive than people in developing countries with rapid population
growth. All the above issues were discussed at the Rio summit, which
concluded that improvement of the uneven global distribution of wealth and
changes to the lifestyles of people in the rich areas are the two crucial
factors in the improvement of the global environment. Over the past decade,
however, we have not seen any of these necessary changes, but instead we
have seen an even larger concentration of wealth, including the appearance
of many extremely rich American capitalists, while we still see no
improvements to the problems of poverty and hunger in developing countries.
The crux of the problem is, in fact, the above-mentioned conclusion from the
Rio summit, which came to nothing more than slogans for moral persuasion
without any real binding power whatsoever. We only have to make a comparison
with the WTO agreement which was signed during the same period to see
clearly that only global agreements regarding wealth accumulation are given
serious treatment, since these agreements are supported by legislation and
punishments. But agreements such as "Agenda 21," which deals with the health
of the global environment and which was signed at the Rio summit, the
agreements on global climate change and the Convention on Biological
Diversity are all non-binding agreements. Looking ahead to this second World
Summit on Sustainable Development, therefore, we expect representatives from
various countries to discuss and criticize the lack of global efforts in the
area of environmental protection over the past decade. We also hope that the
summit will create a treaty with real regulatory power when it comes to
world poverty, the uneven global distribution of wealth and various root
causes of environmental destruction. If this does not happen, we will still
hear warnings about biological extinction 10 years from now, and we will
also continue to remain cold to this kind of news.
68. FIXING THE GLOBAL WATER CRISIS NEEDS MORE THAN TAPS AND TOILETS
By Jamie Pittock
WWF
31 July 2002
Internet:
http://panda.org/news/features/story.cfm?id=3052
Jamie Pittock is
Director of WWF International's Living Waters Programme
Government leaders meeting at the World Summit on Sustainable Development
will take decisions that shape how water is managed over the next ten years.
WWF is concerned that Summit preparations have so far only focused on water
delivery and sanitation, while ignoring the crucial issue of water supply.
The world is facing a freshwater crisis. People already use over half the
world's accessible freshwater, and may use nearly three-quarters by 2025.
Over 1.5 billion people lack ready access to drinking water and, if current
consumption patterns continue, at least 3.5 billion people - nearly half the
world's projected population - will live in water-stressed river basins in
just 20 years.
On top of this, contamination denies some 3.3 billion people access to clean
water, and 2.5 billion people have no water sanitation services. In
developing countries an estimated 90 per cent of wastewater is discharged
without treatment into rivers and streams. Each year there are about 250
million cases of water-related diseases, with some 5-10 million deaths.
Not only people are threatened by water shortages and pollution. Freshwater
ecosystems, which harbour the greatest concentration of species, are amongst
the most vulnerable on Earth. Half the world's wetlands have been destroyed
in the last 100 years. Two-fifths of the world's fish are freshwater species
- and of these, 20 per cent are threatened, endangered, or have become
extinct in recent decades. In North America, freshwater animals are the most
endangered wildlife group, dying out five times faster than species on land.
Water is an issue that affects us all. It is vital that world leaders
meeting at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) come up with a
plan to address the world's dwindling freshwater resources. But in a 21st
century version of the cargo cult, it seems our leaders believe that the
global crisis can be solved by building more taps and toilets - 750 million
and 1.25 billion more, respectively, by 2015 under the draft WSSD Plan of
Implementation - without actually ensuring there is any water available to
make them work. Improved water distribution and sanitation services are
obviously needed to help combat poverty, disease, and pollution. However,
water shortages in many countries are primarily due to poor management:
water sources have not been conserved and water is not used efficiently.
These problems are not limited to developing countries. The Colorado River
in North America and Murray River in Australia are amongst the Earth's major
rivers that are regularly sucked dry.
Degradation of water sources leads to less freshwater being available, and
is largely due to poor management of river basins. Culprits include
deforestation and overgrazing, which lead to erratic water runoff and
desertification. Water diversion and inefficient water use are also a
problem. Irrigated agricultural systems, which consume 70 per cent of the
world's diverted water, lose up to 80 per cent of their water through
leakage in earthern channels and inefficient application onto fields. In
developing countries, up to half the water delivered to cities is lost in
leaking pipes. Water is also lost through unchecked spread of exotic weeds
and inappropriate, and often subsidised, agricultural practises such as
growing water-thirsty crops in dry areas.
Problems with water diversions are often exacerbated where ground water or
rivers cross political borders, and where there are no effective water
sharing agreements. An infamous example is the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers,
where the governments of Turkey, Syria, and Iraq compete to use as much
water as possible. Although dams can now divert all of the flow of these
rivers, 20 more dams are under construction. In the meantime, the
Mesopotamian Marshes - which once covered an area nearly half the size of
Switzerland and were central to the livelihoods of the half a million Ma'dan
or Marsh Arab people - have been all but destroyed.
Conserving freshwater ecosystems through better management would not only
help maintain the amount of water available, but also its quality.
Streamside forests and wetlands can purify water by trapping pollutants. In
addition, a major cause of the spread of malaria and water-borne diseases
such as schistosomiasis, for example, is the expansion of dams and
irrigation schemes.
Healthy freshwater ecosystems also enhance food security. In Africa, 21 per
cent of the population's protein comes from freshwater fisheries. These
fisheries are destroyed by dams, but could be improved through better
habitat management. Furthermore, traditional sustainable ways of growing
food crops that work with nature, such as planting on floodplains after
annual floods recede, are being lost to ineffective irrigation developments.
Despite the many benefits of river basin conservation and efficient water
use, these have only been mentioned rhetorically in WSSD preparations to
date, without any serious commitments by governments to targeted and
measurable actions. Nothing in the draft plan will prevent more rivers from
being over-exploited. Indeed, two blocks of governments are openly
antagonistic to measurable progress in conserving water bodies. The United
States, Canada, Japan, and Australia are objecting to the adoption of
measurable targets and funding allocations for sustainable water management,
while a small group of influential developing countries led by Turkey is
seeking to prevent agreements for managing international or transboundary
rivers, fearful that they may constrain their plans to fully exploit rivers
in their territories.
To further complicate matters, some organizations are arguing that the
solution to the world's water problems lie in establishing new agreements
and institutions. However, the disputes and legal problems currently slowing
implementation of the environmental treaties born at the 1992 Rio Earth
Summit do not bode well for a new water treaty, which is not really
necessary - there are already existing institutions for sustainable
management of freshwater which, if embraced by the international community,
could lead to immediate improvements in global water management.
One way to conserve water sources and ensure equitable sharing is to
establish and enhance stewardship programmes for managing individual rivers
and water bodies. Such initiatives bring together governments and
stakeholders to share water and look after the river basin environment in
order to sustain water quantity and quality and to conserve fish and other
resources. An example is the Murray Darling Basin Commission in Australia,
which brings together six state governments and the community. Following
growing and unsustainable diversion of water - now at 80 per cent of the
river's flow - in 1996 the Commission facilitated a decision to cap water
extractions, requiring new commercial water users to be supplied from
efficiency savings rather than new diversions.
River basin organizations have the added benefit of promoting international
cooperation, peace, and security. There are 261 major transboundary water
bodies, many without an effective, or even any, cooperative management
organization. These should be a priority for international efforts in
establishing stewardship programmes.
Governments should also remember that there is already a successful
international treaty for promoting wise use of freshwater ecosystems that
includes a framework for sustainable development, conservation, and poverty
alleviation. The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, which includes 133 nations
as members, is a model for transparent and effective multinational action to
conserve freshwater habitats. More than most other agreements, it actively
engages government, non-government, and multilateral agencies in
partnerships to enhance cooperation and joint work, and focuses on the
importance of engaging local and indigenous peoples in conservation.
Despite embodying all that the WSSD wishes to achieve, the Ramsar Convention
receives just one rhetorical reference in the draft WSSD Plan of
Implementation. In the same way that other Conventions have been
specifically singled out, the mandate of and funding for the Ramsar
Convention should also be enhanced in the draft plan to allow it to do even
more towards sustaining the vital role of wetlands in providing water for
people and nature.
There is still time for government leaders to address the critical issue of
conserving the world's scarce freshwater supplies. Hopefully, the final WSSD
Plan of Implementation will adopt simple and practical targets for
conserving water sources and using water more efficiently.
69. A PROGRAM TO AVOID APPALLING DETERIORATION by James Gustave Speth
International Herald Tribune
30 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/66045.html
The writer is dean
of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. This comment was
adapted for the International Herald Tribune from an article in the
July/August issue of Foreign Policy.
NEW HAVEN, Connecticut President Jimmy Carter asked a group of us in his
administration to prepare what became the "Global 2000 Report to the
President." Our task was to project what population and environmental
outcomes would unfold by 2000 if societies did nothing to change course. Our
estimates were frighteningly on target. And two decades later, rates of
environmental deterioration continue essentially unabated.
Information on global environmental trends is far more sophisticated today
but no more reassuring. Most people will soon live in water-stressed areas.
Half the tropical forests are gone. Bird and mammal species are disappearing
at a rate 100 to 1,000 times the rate at which extinctions naturally occur.
Seventy percent of marine fisheries are either fished to capacity or
overfished. Most threatening of all, global climate change is well under
way. The World Summit on Sustainable Development, to be held in
Johannesburg in August, is the latest opportunity to plot a course for
effective environmental policies. But it would be wrong to think that it
will take decisive action. This summit promises to be anything but
revolutionary. In fact, 20 years of international environmental
negotiations have been disappointing. It is not that what has been agreed
upon - for example, in the conventions on climate, desertification and
biodiversity - is useless. But these treaties are mostly frameworks for
action. They do not drive the needed changes. Vague agreements, minimal
requirements, lax enforcement and underfunded support plague the new field
of international environmental law. The principal attempt to reach a
binding, action-forcing agreement - the climate convention's Kyoto Protocol
- only modestly contributes to a climate solution and has yet to be adopted
a decade after the convention was signed.
These weaknesses should not be a surprise. Environmental negotiations have
given maximum leverage to countries with an interest in thwarting
international action. The United States successfully weakened the Kyoto
Protocol; Brazil has worked to keep a forest convention at bay; Japan and
other major fishing countries watered down the international marine
fisheries agreement. Similarly, the institutions created to address these
issues - the United Nations Environment Program and the Commission on
Sustainable Development - are among the weakest multilateral organizations.
It is time to remedy the shortcomings of the past. We have tended to mistake
negotiation for action. We need, first, to address more directly and
aggressively the main drivers of environmental deterioration. An escalation
of proven, noncoercive approaches to population control could lead to a
leveling off of global population at about 8.5 billion people in this
century. But this will not happen without adequate support for the 1994
Cairo Plan of Action - a United Nations commitment to improving women's
health, welfare and status that is now being underfunded by half.
Poverty is an important destroyer of environment. The poor often have no
choice but to lean too heavily on a declining resource base. Also,
developing countries distrust the intentions and policies of advanced
nations. The rich world has to recognize these challenges. Enhanced
development cooperation provides the only context to address both
development and environmental objectives. Transformation of the
technologies that dominate manufacturing, energy, transportation and
agriculture is key to reducing pollution and resource consumption while
achieving expected economic growth. But the required changes in technology
and consumption will not happen unless there are environmentally honest
prices. Full-cost pricing is everywhere thwarted by the failure of
governments to eliminate environmentally perverse subsidies. There is no
reason to expect major environmental improvement while such distortions
persist. If the world is to attack these problems, it must radically revise
its approach to global environmental governance. Progress depends on new
procedures for forging international agreements and on new institutions,
including a World Environment Organization that could be as effective as the
World Trade Organization is in its sphere. The political system alternates
between incremental drift and rapid change. The global environment has been
addressed incrementally, but a phase shift is needed - something akin to the
outpouring of domestic environmental concern in America in the 1960s and
1970s. Is it possible that the world is witnessing the birth of such a
change in the anti-globalization protests, in the unprecedented initiatives
undertaken by both private corporations and local communities, in the growth
of nongovernmental organizations and their innovations, in scientists
speaking up and speaking out and in the outpouring of environmental
initiatives by the religious community? We must certainly hope so. The
alarms sounded 20 years ago have not been heeded, and soon it will be too
late to prevent an appalling deterioration of the natural world.
70. REFORM OF EU AID PROGRAMME IS OVERDUE by Clare Short
The Guardian
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/eu/story/0,9061,764916,00.html
Clare Short is
secretary of state for international development
As the world's largest aid donor, the European Union could be making a huge
contribution to the international fight against poverty. Unfortunately, its
development programme is an embarrassment. Unless Europe targets spending
more effectively at achieving the internationally agreed millennium
development goals of halving poverty, getting all children into school,
reducing child and maternal mortality, and focusing on sustainable
development, Britain and the other member states should "renationalise"
their aid budgets. Globally, untying aid, focusing it where the poor are
and backing reformers would increase the value of existing aid by 50% to
$87bn - and massively improve public confidence. We therefore need to target
parts of the international system which can do most to achieve this. The
worst offender for highly ineffective aid spending is the European
commission. With an annual spend of about 6bn, it has programmes in almost
every developing country. And 25% of the UK's aid budget - more than 1bn in
2000 - is transferred to the EC each year. Some of its work is now of high
quality but, overall, EC programmes are not focused on reducing poverty. The
proportion of EC aid spent in low-income countries has fallen from 70% in
1990 to 38%. Commissioners Chris Patten and Poul Nielson have made a start
on tackling inefficiency. The turnaround in the quality of EC programmes in
the Balkans is one example. But they would be the first to admit that
procedures are still too slow and complex. The confusing political direction
set by member states and the European parliament means that EC spending is
not focused on the reduction of poverty. In the past few years we have
worked to tackle some of the most glaring problems, and the EC now at least
has an agreed objective of reducing global poverty. But the radical progress
we need has not been achieved. We must grasp every opportunity for reform.
First, make poverty reduction the overriding objective. Too often the
political consensus reached by the council of ministers and the European
parliament is to maintain spending at historical levels in regions where the
sole motive is that the EU has a general political interest there. Large
resource transfers to middle-income countries with high lev els of poverty
simply prop up the status quo and do not generate reform. The events of
September 11 highlight the links between poverty and insecurity and the need
for the EU to widen its horizon beyond the near-abroad, and focus its scarce
resources where they can make the most difference in tackling poverty and
instability. We need a clear commitment to the millennium development goals
in the EC. This requires a major refocus ing of its aid spending on poverty
reduction and a stronger commitment to development in trade, the environment
and other policies. Programmes should operate at the highest EU standards,
not the lowest. Second, we need to focus EC programmes where they can add
value, and cut back other activities. That means a hard look at why EU
member states have EC programmes as well as national ones. If EC programmes
can be better delivered through national agencies or other multilateral
ones, then it is hard to justify their continuation. Likewise, if the EC can
find a way of being effective then we should also use it more as a channel
for national funds. Third, we need to streamline radically the instruments
used by the EC, which have created complex and slow procedures. EC
development legislation is byzantine, with overlapping regulations governing
external programmes. On top of this, the annual budget process encourages
complexity through its tendency to promote special interests. I would
instead like to see a single regulation for EC development spending that
ends the unhealthy focus on geo-political regions and encourages a global
approach to poverty reduction - with resources allocated where they will do
most to achieve this - backed up by clearer measurement of effectiveness and
quality of performance. This would give the commission more freedom to
manage EC programmes effectively without micro-management from member states
and the parliament. I welcome recent reforms of EC development programmes.
They are beginning to make a difference. But as they roll out we also run up
against their limitations. We have until 2006 when a new external affairs
budget will be set. My personal view is that we should demand a massive
improvement in EC programmes and a return to at least 70% of resources spent
on low-income countries. If this is not achieved, we should demand
renationalisation of the aid programme. If the EC cannot add value to the
work of member states then this is what the principle of subsidiarity
dictates.
71. BUSINESS AND NGOS MUST SEIZE THE DAY
Business Day via All Africa
29 July 2002
Internet:
http://allafrica.com/stories/200207290452.html
Colleen Du Toit is
Director of the Southern African Grantmakers Association. Eugene Saldanha is
Director of the NonProfit Partnership
AN UNEXPECTED convergence has emerged suddenly in the often stormy courtship
between SA's nonprofit and business sectors. The findings of a recent
research report suggest that it is time the two sectors seek co-operation in
the interests of sustainable development and business growth. The report
comes at a time when SA's corporates are grappling with the implications of
the second King report, which suggests a social responsibility framework for
business in terms of the "triple bottom line" of financial, social and
environmental accountability. And next month's World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg is expected to give further impetus to the
debate. Significantly, the nonprofit study reveals that corporate investment
in development is quantitatively substantial, even while its actual effect
on poverty is qualitatively uncertain. The King report states that
"sustainability" or "social, ethical and environmental issues can no longer
be regarded as secondary to more conventional business imperatives". The
report recommends ethical, integrated and strategic approaches to social
investment spending, and specifically locates the whole "sustainability"
question within a framework of "African humanism" or ubuntu, which
recognises the importance of interdependent relationships, in this case
between an enterprise and the community in which it exists. In the
international arena, the "global compact", emphasises the need to build
cross-sectoral partnerships in support of poverty alleviation and
sustainable development. This compact calls for alignment of corporate
policy and practice with values upholding enlightened human rights, labour
and environmental standards.
Much closer to home, the New Partnership for Africa's Development initiative
is underpinned by concepts of mutual partnership between government,
business and civil society. Given these overarching moves towards
cross-sectoral co-operation, it seems that this is the ideal time for SA
business and nonprofit players to "seize the day" as suggested by King. The
perception within the nonprofit sector is that lack of finance is the key
impediment to effective delivery. The new study shows that the "lack" is
really in the area of leadership and management capacity. It is now time for
nonprofit organisations to capacitate themselves to take advantage of SA's
very progressive policy environment, and the considerable resources
available to them. The "lack" is not funding, it is strategy, management and
information. While the challenge for the organisations is to move quickly to
become effective implementers of development, corporate donors need more
integrated strategies, implemented through closer social engagement.
The corporate sector should recognise that both its business and social
responsibility activities will increasingly happen in an environment
demanding real accountability. Business and the nongovernmental or nonprofit
sectors are traditionally viewed as adversaries, locked in a combat of
values and scarce resources. But both globally and nationally, that terrain
is changing.
While there is no doubt that there will always be a need for the "watchdog",
or civil regulation role of nongovernmental organisations, the urgent need
is for on-the-ground, tangible development. Given a state apparatus still
too weak to meet all needs, the call must be for multisectoral co-operation
in the interests of successful sustainable development programmes.
It is in moving to meet these challenges that the rationale for business/nonprofit
organisations co-operation emerges.
For instance at the micro level, such co-operation can look for solutions to
local social and environmental problems, while at the macro or policy level,
business and nonprofit organisations can work to develop mutually acceptable
best practices, monitoring and evaluation methodologies, and specifically SA
indicators and standards for monitoring the effect of their sustainability
initiatives.
72. SLOUCHING TOWARD JOHANNESBURG: U.S. IS A LONG WAY FROM SUSTAINABILITY by
John C. Dernbach
Foreign Policy in Focus
26 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.oneworld.net/cgi-bin/index.cgi?root=129&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Efpif%2Eorg%2Fcommentary%2F2002%2F0207sustainable%2Ehtml
John Dernbach, law
professor at Widener University, is the editor of Stumbling Toward
Sustainability, a new book published the Environmental Law Institute (www.eli.org).
This commentary for Foreign Policy in Focus (www.fpif.org) was adapted from
testimony he delivered to a joint hearing of the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee and Senate Foreign Relations Committee on July 24,
2002.
It has now been ten years since the United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development, or Earth Summit, in Rio de Janeiro. At that conference, the
United States and other countries agreed to implement an ambitious plan for
sustainable development--both at home and internationally. The World Summit
on Sustainable Development (Aug. 26-Sept. 4, 2002) in Johannesburg will
provide an international assessment of what has happened over the past ten
years, and lead to decisions about where to go next. The U.S. has
unquestionably begun to take some steps toward sustainable development,
largely because of our environmental and conservation laws. Yet, on balance,
the United States is now far from being a sustainable society, and in many
respects is further away than it was at the time of the Earth Summit in
1992. Unlike many other developed countries, the United States has not used
a strategic process to move the country toward a sustainable future and has
not educated the American people about the opportunities and challenges of
sustainable development. With 5% of the world's population, the United
States was at the time of the Earth Summit responsible for about 24% of the
world's energy consumption and almost 30% of the world's raw materials
consumption. Since the Earth Summit, materials use has increased 10%,
primary energy consumption has increased 21%, and energy-related carbon
dioxide emissions have increased by 13%. Over and over, increases in
materials and energy efficiency, and in the effectiveness of pollution
controls for individual sources, were outweighed by increases in
consumption. Despite a significant increase in municipal waste recycling in
the past decade, for example, American generation and disposal of municipal
solid waste per capita have been growing since 1996. According to Harvard
biologist Edward O. Wilson, "four more planet Earths" would be needed for
"every person in the world to reach present U.S. levels of consumption with
existing technology." Yet the U.S. standard of living--equated with high
levels of consumption and "the good life"--is widely envied and emulated
throughout the world.
National Sustainable Development Strategy is Needed
The federal government should adopt and implement a national strategy for
sustainable development, with specified goals and priorities, to harness all
sectors of society to achieve our economic, social, environmental, and
security goals. The strategy would lead to a stronger, more prosperous
America with a higher quality of life because we would be pursuing these
goals in ways that support each other in greater and greater degrees over
time, rather than undermining each other. The strategy could be modeled on
that of the European Union or states such as Oregon and New Jersey, and
specifically address climate change, biodiversity, international trade, and
other major issues. A set of indicators to measure progress in achieving
goals would make the strategy more effective and meaningful. In addition,
the U.S. needs to recognize that its substantial consumption levels, coupled
with domestic population growth, have serious environmental, social, and
economic impacts. Americans also need to understand that human well-being
can be maintained and enhanced by more efficient and effective use of
materials and energy. A shift in taxes from labor and income, on one hand,
to materials and energy consumption, on the other, would encourage both
greater efficiency and reduced negative environmental impacts. The challenge
for the United States is to be an attractive example of what sustainable
development can mean. In this respect, international leadership begins at
home. The U.S. needs to take a stronger and more constructive leadership
role internationally, not only on terrorism but also on the broad range of
issues related to sustainable development. Congress should repeal or modify
laws, policies, and subsidies that encourage unsustainable development.
Protection of natural resources and the environment must focus more
holistically on the resources to be protected, and on understanding those
resources. Transportation, public health, and other social infrastructure
and institutions should be designed and operated to promote economic,
environmental, and social goals at the same time. In virtually every area of
American life, a few people and organizations are exercising leadership for
sustainability. The United States would take a large and decisive step
toward sustainability if individuals, businesses, educational institutions,
local and state governments, federal agencies, and others would simply adopt
and build on the leading sustainability practices of their counterparts. A
properly conceived and implemented strategy would lead to that result.
Toward a Brighter Future for Our Children and Grandchildren
We now face growing environmental degradation around the world and an
increasing gap between rich and poor. These are related problems, and they
hinder or undermine everything else we care about--security, economic
development, social well-being, and even effective governance. Put
differently, poverty and environmental degradation are deeply destabilizing
because they stifle or reduce opportunities and quality of life for many,
many people. In the next 50 years, global population is projected to
increase by three billion people, and the global economy is likely to grow
by four or five times. As difficult as things now are, environmental
degradation and the gap between rich and poor are likely to get much worse
if we continue with business as usual. Should that be our legacy for our
children and grandchildren? We know what we need to do to move toward
sustainability, and we also know why. As Americans, we are called to face
these challenges, and to seize this opportunity.
73. THE MARCH TOWARD DESTRUCTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT by Claude Martin
International Herald Tribune
24 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.iht.com/articles/65407.html
The writer,
director-general of WWF International, based in Gland, contributed this
comment to the International Herald Tribune.
GLAND, Switzerland Humanity's use of natural resources - the so-called
ecological footprint - has exceeded the regenerative capacity of Earth since
the 1980s, and is now about 20 percent too great. If governments do not take
action to halt this trend, then during the lifetime of our children human
welfare will go into further decline. This is the key conclusion of a recent
report by the environmental monitoring group, WWF International. The
ecological footprint is the total area of the planet that humans require for
agriculture, grazing land, timber production, marine fishing and
infrastructure, together with the area necessary for absorbing the carbon
dioxide produced by burning oil, coal and other fossil fuels. At the current
rate of consumption, the ecological footprint of all humankind will reach
twice the regenerative capacity of Earth by 2050. This gargantuan
overconsumption is at the expense of the natural capital of the planet - the
forests, the freshwater ecosystems and oceans - not to mention the
livelihood of communities that directly depend on these resources. We can
already see the effects: Since 1970, the Living Planet Index - a measure of
the health of our planet's ecosystems - has declined by about 35 percent.
Freshwater ecosystems have been particularly hard hit. They have declined 55
percent in the last 30 years.
The Earth has about 11 billion hectares (28 billion acres) of productive
land and sea space, after all unproductive areas of ice caps, desert and
open ocean are discounted. Divided between the global population of 6
billion people, this total equates to just 1.9 hectares per person. Yet the
WWF report shows that the ecological footprint of the world average consumer
in 1999 was 2.3 hectares per person, or 20 percent above Earth's biological
capacity of 1.9 hectares per person.
People in different countries have vastly different ecological footprints.
That of the average African or Asian consumer was less than 1.4 hectares per
person in 1999, the average Western European's footprint was about five
hectares, and the average North American's was about 9.6 hectares.
There are four fundamental changes that must be made to return to a
sustainable development pathway.
First, we must improve the resource-efficiency with which goods and services
are produced.
Second, we must consume resources more efficiently, and redress the
disparity in consumption between high and low income countries.
Third, population growth must be controlled by promoting universal education
and health care.
Fourth, it is imperative that we protect, manage and restore natural
ecosystems to conserve biodiversity and ecological services. This will help
maintain the planet's biological productivity, for the benefit of present
and future generations.
We live on a bountiful planet, but not a limitless one. Bringing the human
footprint back within the carrying capacity of Earth is the real challenge
for the World Summit for Sustainable Development that opens in Johannesburg
in August. The delegates should remember that the year 2050 is within the
lifetime of most of our own children. Our overconsumption of natural
resources today will affect the living standards not of an abstract "future
generation" but of people we know and care about.
A government's responsibilities should include taking care of the long-term
prospects of both the society it represents and the world in which that
society lives. Yet from the behavior of many politicians, one could almost
think their countries are on a different planet, so little bothered do they
seem by the impact of their actions on their own and other societies.
A striking example of the narrow and short-term approach adopted by many
governments is the way in which European powers support their fishing
industries through massive subsidies. This practice has encouraged huge
overfishing, which has led to the near-collapse of European fish stocks in
recent years, notably in the North Atlantic Ocean and the Baltic Sea.
The overfishing is not limited to European waters. West African countries
share one of the world's most productive coastal fisheries. European fishing
fleets have increasingly been attracted to these waters. Technologically
sophisticated trawlers and unfair access agreements with African countries
strapped for foreign currency have had a devastating impact on the fish
stocks.
What the Europeans are doing is exporting the excess capacity of their
vastly over-sized fishing fleet of some 95,000 boats. In propping up their
own unsustainable fishing industry - at taxpayers' expense - they are
helping to destroy the livelihoods of African communities. If European
governments do not act by reforming their Common Fisheries Policy by the end
of 2002, the socioeconomic consequences will be disastrous, and not only in
West Africa. The delegates to the World Summit for Sustainable Development
in Johannesburg must also realize that without vision on the part of
governments and their active engagement in sustainable development, the
whole system of peaceful coexistence may be at stake. Attempting to solve
one's own problems by exploiting the environmental wealth of other societies
cannot be the way forward. Sustainability on a global scale will
undoubtedly become a key issue of the coming decades. Governments which fail
to see this, and which fail to redesign their policies appropriately, will
put at risk the future of the planet - their own people included, of course.
They will also call into question the very purpose of government.
74. THE MISSING LINK IN JOHANNESBURG: SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURS
The Earth Times
21 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/themissinglinkjul21_02.htm
Pamela Hartigan is
Managing Director of The Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship in
Geneva.
Another UN Summit, this one on Sustainable Development, convenes next month
in Johannesburg to mark the decade since Rio (Rio + 10). About 80,000
delegates representing governments, multilateral and bilateral agencies,
businesses, activists and journalists are due to attend. I have been to two
not dissimilar global UN events. One was the 1994 UN International
Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) held in Cairo. The other was
the 1995 UN Conference on Women held in Beijing. Both times I was
representing a UN organization, the World Health Organization. At the Cairo
Conference, my first experience at such an event, I would have been lost had
it not been for a well-weathered colleague from my organization who took me
under her wing. She carried the official draft report of the ICPD document
through the hallways clutched to her chest. I think she had memorized every
word in the tome. The final document had 16 sections, and each is about five
pages of single-spaced type. I came to understand that the phrases in
brackets in a UN Conference draft document were those with which one or more
governments had found issue. The main purpose of UN Conferences is to
negotiate the language in those brackets. UN technical agencies such as WHO
attend the conferences to provide information to member governments about
the technical accuracy and/or implications, in our case, for health, of the
bracketed issues being debated. Our role is to dispassionately present the "factsî,
neutrality being at a premium. I wondered how I would ever be neutral and
dispassionate about women's reproductive health and reproductive rights. I
was clearly not cut out for the job. But in Cairo and again in Beijing, I
trailed after my colleagues for 10 days. The Conferences lasted that long!
Every day was like the previous one, highlighted only by passionate speeches
from world leaders who were free to come and go with their respective
entourages. But for the most part, we remained trapped in the rooms where
the delegates debated the bracketed language in the document until consensus
was reached. This went on often until the wee hours of the morning. There I
sat, for hours, waiting in case anyone from any country had a technical
question on health. I had not had so much fun since 10th grade English
literature class when we dissected every word in Ulysses by James Joyce. It
was actually a bit like watching cement set.
But, I was told, the entire process was worthwhile because activists all
over the world would be able to wave the document that their respective
governments had signed and hold them responsible for honoring the language
to which they had agreed. Hmm....
In hindsight, I suppose I was too impatient with the process of never-ending
intergovernmental consensus building, too convinced of the futility of it
all, knowing that there was no way to ensure that governments signing the
document lived up to their commitments. I was also frustrated by the
overriding stress on the advocacy role for NGOs instead of one where NGOs
were purveyors of concrete and feasible alternatives. In any case, it is no
wonder that I now delight in working with social entrepreneurs. The sad
irony is that while the community of social entrepreneurs has many hundreds
of years of accumulated practical experience with solving current problems
related to sustainable development, they are seldom given the platform to
share with the world their methods and results so that others can emulate
what they have done.
Worse still, those very actors, be they governments or representatives of
business, that will be sitting around the table in Johannesburg next month
to expound on their efforts to contribute to sustainable development, often
impede social entrepreneurs in carrying out their innovative work. My
colleagues at the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship and I have
just returned from weeks of travel to different parts of the world to carry
out due diligence on our next round of candidates for the Schwab network of
outstanding social entrepreneurs. What these individuals are doing is
already difficult enough without artificial impediments, given their aim to
innovate and achieve transformation for the social good. But governments and
businesses sometimes kill or threaten the survival of the goose that lays
the golden eggs of sustainable development. Let me provide just two current
examples of social enterprises that have been contributing to sustainable
development in the decade since the Rio Summit. Javier Hurtado Mercado is a
Bolivian social entrepreneur who in 1987 established Irupana, an enterprise
that works directly with 1,700 indigenous farming families living in the
Yungas region. Irupana focuses on buying and processing certified
organically grown produce directly from those farmers, cutting out the
middleman, and distributing those indigenous foods to Bolivian consumers.
Hurtado started Irupana with US$4,000 and one product, toasted coffee (he
says he is still the best coffee toaster in Bolivia). Today, Irupana
produces and distributes 80 products including coffee, tea, bread, honey,
marmalades, chocolate, dried fruits, a variety of cereals, granola bars, and
dairy products to 18 Irupana stores and 300 outlets that stock Irupana
products, as well as supermarkets in Bolivia's large cities. Approximately
4,000 customers a day buy Irupana's products. Organic goods sell at higher
prices in local markets, as they are targeted to middle and upper income
consumers, thereby allowing Irupana to pay prices to producers that are
about 25 percent higher than those for non-organic produce. Moreover,
Hurtado encourages the indigenous families with which he works to keep a
portion of their produce for themselves, ensuring their improved nutrition
and health. He employs knowledge of organic agriculture, as well as
extremely high standards of production, to create a product that will
command a price premium in local markets. Last year, Irupana's sales
expanded by 32 percent, despite the economic situation in the region.
Hurtado's ultimate goal is to establish a new model of social enterprise
financing for Bolivia, one where Irupana is owned by its factory workers and
the farmers themselves, as well as other interested investors. Irupana is
now attracting international buyers, and one European organic food buyer has
signed a contract to buy 60 tons of Irupana's cereals every year for the
next three years. I spent 4 days visiting Irupana, and trekked 40 kilometers
up and back to the Andean community of Churubamba, 3,000 meters above sea
level, where a community of 30 of the 1,700 Indian families live that supply
Irupana. We slept two to a bed for those nights in one of the small huts in
the village. Hurtado is clearly more than just a buyer. I was continuously
struck by how he interacts with the farmers, both men and women. He
explained carefully and clearly how they might improve their products,
subtly guiding them to come up with their own answers. He is funny, smart
and ultimately very humble. He gets involved in all aspects of their lives,
not just farming, listens to them patiently, teases them affectionately, and
they engage with him. So what is the problem? Irupana, according to the
government, is a business. Fair enough, so it is, but it is also performing
vital social and environmental roles that government cannot play as
effectively. Should it be taxed then at the same rate as, say, Carrefour,
the French hypermarche that dominates the Bolivian market? According to the
Bolivian tax system, it is no different . But, argues Hurtado, Irupana will
be crushed if it has to pay conventional business taxes. What makes the
issue more painful is the knowledge that the bigger and more powerful the
enterprise, the greater the chances that it will find ways to minimize such
taxes . Governments attending the UN Conference in Johannesburg might
forward their global agenda, and save their budgets money, by reorienting
their attention from treaties and wordy professions of ideals to the kinds
of practical incentives regimes and supports that the world needs to foster,
rather than impede, sound social enterprises such as Irupana. Just next
door, in Quito, Ecuador, another social entrepreneur, Maria Elena Ordoez,
founded Arcandina (Andean arc) to create multi-media products targeted at
children that are both entertaining and educational. In particular,
Arcandina focuses on conveying practical messages on environmental
conservation and the unique Latin American fauna and flora by using some of
the main endangered species as muppet characters. Maria Elena and her
colleagues are convinced that through Arcandina, they can empower a new
generation that believes in its ability to effect positive environmental
changes, altering the dangerously unsustainable course upon which we are
currently embarked. This is not a crazy idea. Using me as a test case, and
in just a few hours of exposure to Arcandina, I found myself as absorbed in
its power to entertain and educate as any member of its target group,
children between ages 7 and 14. Others seem to be similarly enchanted by the
characters, the music, and the messages. Earlier this year, Arcandina was
recipient of the National Wildlife Federation Award for "the most
outstanding international production aimed at children."
Arcandina began in Quito in 1996, then went national. Between 1996 and 2000,
Arcandina was transmitted nationally in Ecuador by Teleamazonas. Each
program reached approximately 88,000 children. These youngsters gave it a
16/20 rating, and what was most unusual in Ecuador, the television station
and Arcandina received approximately 8,400 requests over a 6 months period
from children calling in about the episodes, and wanting more information
about environmental issues.
But in 2000, Teleamazonas abruptly decided to drop Arcandina, despite its
obvious success with its primary audience. According to one source, an
Ecuadorian journalist, "Arcandina is no longer transmitted in this country
because the values associated with environmental conservation are not
considered to be commercially profitable". Today, Ecuadorian television for
children is non-existent outside violent cartoons. Parents across the
country vilify the medium but have not moved to change the situation.
Ironically, while Teleamazonas let Arcandina fall through the cracks in
2000, Telemundo, a Latin American television production and distribution
company, picked Arcandina as the one high quality children's program it
wanted to buy for wide distribution in the Americas. Thus, while the
Arcandina show stopped being aired in Ecuador, its programs have continued
to be popular in several Latin American countries. It is the first
Ecuadorian program that has been broadcast daily for more than two years in
the United States and Puerto Rico. I have provided just two current
examples from Latin America but the experiences of social entrepreneurs
everywhere from Eastern Europe, Asia, and Africa to the Western Pacific are
not dissimilar. Government and business representatives attending
Johannesburg, and their counterparts elsewhere, might well reflect long and
hard on how they might better support social entrepreneurial efforts like
those of the Maria Elena Ordoezes and Javier Hurtados of the world, who work
at the "bleeding edge" of the market for sustainable development. Experience
in the 10 years since Rio makes abundantly clear to those on the ground the
futility of focusing on macro and geopolitical issues and consensus
building, while neglecting the home-grown realities in oneís own backyard
that constrain citizen's efforts to offer viable alternatives to
unsustainable development.
75. PARTNERSHIPS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: HARNESSING ACTION FOR THE 21ST
CENTURY
By MARK MALLOCH BROWN
The Earth Times
21 July 2002
Internet:
http://www.earthtimes.org/jul/partnershipsforjul21_02.htm
Mark Malloch Brown
is Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme
At the end of August, global leaders will come together in Johannesburg for
the World Summit on Sustainable Development, marking the 10th anniversary of
the Rio Earth Summit.
That historic event in Rio de Janeiro a decade ago set out a clear and
farsighted vision to protect and preserve our environment while ensuring
that future development is sustainable. The Millennium Summit two years
ago, gave us shared, timebound set of targets in the form of the eight
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), with the overarching aim of halving
extreme poverty by 2015.
And the Monterrey Conference on Financing for Development earlier this year
set out a path for achieving both sets of goals: through a new Global Deal
by which rich countries provide the trade opportunities, aid, technology
transfer and other support to poor countries that have the commitment to
undertake serious political and economic reform aimed at achieving those
Goals.
Now, in Johannesburg, we have an opportunity to build on this strong
foundation, and map out practical plans of action that both close the
ìimplementation gapî that opened up after Rio and lay a strong foundation
for global and national efforts to meet the MDGs over the next 13 years.
What we need are concrete plans that will help developing countries make
progress in all these areas. And a key focus for those plans must be not
simply about providing access for developing countries -- to markets, or
technology or even wealth -- but about building strong, democratic
institutions at all levels of society.
Because we know -- as will be spelled out in UNDP's Human Development Report
2002 -- that tackling poverty and the other deprivations from disease to
environmental degradation that both contribute to and exacerbate the plight
of the poor; that poverty is at root a question of building and providing
access to sound, transparent, accountable institutions capable of protecting
the environment while delivering services from clean water to basic health
care to justice to economic opportunity to the poor.
That is why capacity development is at the core of UNDP's ongoing reforms --
and why it is so central to broader UN efforts to help meet the
Secretary-General's five priority areas for Johannesburg -- Water, Energy,
Health, Agriculture and Biodiversity -- all of which will help contribute to
the achievement of the MDGs.
Because as a global community we now better understand sustainable
development. We recognize "subsidiarity" and the promise of participation at
the local level. We recognize the power of an enabled civil society, which
both stands guard against inequity and finds innovative solutions. We
recognize the power of women as key catalysts of change. We appreciate that
the private sector is strategically placed to help make the critical shifts
towards sustainable consumption and production. And we all agree that we
need comprehensive and far-reaching action and results.
There is a lot of work to be done. In March, UNDP released a new report on
the MDGs entitled "How Many Countries Are On Track?" The good news is that
for universal primary education and gender equity in education, many
developing countries have already achieved the goals or are on track to do
so. Because of the importance of education to so many areas of development,
this situation strengthens the possibilities for progress towards the other
goals. Furthermore, over 60 percent of the world's people live in 43
countries that have met or are on track to meet the goal of halving the
number of people who are hungry.
The bad news is that in other areas more than half the countries for which
data are available will not achieve the goals without significant
acceleration in progress. Many of these are least developed countries in
sub-Saharan Africa. While 50 countries have achieved or are on track to
achieve the safe water goal, 83 countries with 70 percent of the worldís
people are behind. With regard to income poverty, more than 40 percent of
the worldís people live in countries that are on track to meet the goal.
The situation is perhaps most serious for under-five mortality. While 66
countries are on track to meet the goal, 83 countries with around 60 per
cent of the worldís people are lagging behind -- in 10 countries; under-five
mortality rates are actually increasing.
One of the most startling conclusions is the fact that not all the goals can
even be monitored since there are insufficient data to assess the reduction
of poverty and maternal mortality or the incidence of HIV/AIDS. There is
clearly an urgent need for improved statistics on even these most basic
aspects of development.
UNDP, working through the UN Development Group, is now helping to map out a
broader UN strategy around the MDGs that ranges from incorporating them into
the UN's country level operational work and planning instruments, to
supporting new research and advocacy campaigns around the MDGs, to the
preparation of new country level MDG Reports that will measure progress in
every developing country. The first nine of these are complete with 40
currently underway and every developing country due to have completed its
first by 2004. But real progress will depend on building new partnerships
for action that can use this work as a platform to move forward.
Partnerships improve transparency and foster innovation. They allow a more
comprehensive analysis of issues than any one stakeholder group can achieve.
They allow markets and business to deliver on public goods. They help
leverage additional resources. And perhaps most importantly, they offer new
forms of governance that recognizes the comparative advantage of
governmental, inter-governmental and non-governmental partners.
For sustainable development, we need to focus in particular on creating more
effective partnerships with the poor to empower them to implement their own
solutions to key national and global development challenges. Some of the
most effective partnerships of this kind bring small non-government
organizations and community-based organizations to work closely with
multilaterals and multinational businesses. For the past 10 years, for
example, UNDP's Capacity 21 programme has been helping countries build these
kinds of multi-sectoral partnerships in over 80 countries and in
Johannesburg it will be relaunched and expanded to focus more on the MDGs
and the deadline of 2015 for achieving our overarching aims.
Developing countries are not waiting for help. Initiatives like the New
African Partnership for Development show how governments are taking
responsibility for their own challenges and addressing the needs of their
citizens directly. But there can be no escaping the need for greater
commitments through trade opportunities, technology transfer and development
assistance. And this assistance is clearly an investmentó both in terms of
direct benefits to the millions who will live longer, healthier and more
productive lives as a result, and also in promoting global human and
ecological security.
We must also increase our efforts to empower women. Gender equality as it
relates to education is a Millennium Development Goal but we all recognize
that the issue pervades all our overarching objectives. In the words of the
Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen, "What begins as the neglect of interests of
women ends in causing adversity for the health and survival of all."
Finally, since the poor suffer most from the degradation of their land, air,
water and biological resources, achieving the MDGs requires attention to
links with the environment and energy. This is clear with regard to the
first goal of reducing income poverty by half by 2015 since most of the
rural poor depend directly on the environment and natural resources for
their livelihood -- and are in need of greatly enhanced energy services to
pull themselves out of poverty.
To achieve the maternal and child mortality goals we must find ways to
prevent the estimated 3.4 million deaths of children each year due to
inadequate water supply, sanitation and hygiene -- and the more than two
million additional deaths due to indoor air pollution. Similarly, since
rural women play a key role in managing their natural resources such as
food, water and fuelwood, and are disproportionately impacted by the
degradation of those resources, achievement of the gender equality goal will
also depend on improvements in environmental management. And the energy
sector offers especially promising potential. Measures that promote
renewable energy and increase energy efficiency will simultaneously support
multiple development objectives, including job creation and poverty
reduction, while also protecting the environment and helping to mitigate
climate change.
There is much to do. In Rio ten years ago, the wall between environment and
development came down, but we have not yet been able to take the next step
of integrating those priorities into concrete plans of action that deliver
results where they are most needed: for the very poorest. By re-igniting
that global commitment in Johannesburg and launching powerful new
partnerships aimed at delivery rather than rhetoric, the World Summit offers
a unique opportunity to launch a new, coordinated global effort towards
sustainable development and the achievement of the MDGs.
ON THE WEB
76. FEATURE - URBAN JUNGLES TO TEST UN RESOLVE AT SUMMIT – Reuters via
Planet Ark 1 August 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17106/story.htm
77. INTERVIEW - ENVOY SAYS EARTH SUMMIT BACK FROM THE BRINK – Reuters via
Planet Ark 31 July 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17094/story.htm
78. WHITE HOUSE UNDERMINING ENVIRONMENT SUMMIT - SENATOR – Reuters via
Planet Ark 26 July 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/17036/story.htm
79. FEATURE - IS A "SIXTH" EXTINCTION LOOMING? - Reuters via Planet Ark 23
July 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16971/story.htm
80. EARTH SUMMIT FAILURE COULD IMPERIL TRADE TALKS - EU – Reuters via Planet
Ark 23 July 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16970/story.htm
81. EU TO STRIVE TO MAKE EARTH SUMMIT A SUCCESS – Reuters via Planet Ark 23
July 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16973/story.htm
82. EU ENVIRONMENT MINISTERS PREPARE FOR EARTH SUMMIT – Reuters via Planet
Ark 22 July 2002
http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/16951/story.htm